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Choosing a color palette
All 8-bit
images contain a color palette of up to 256 available colors. The
image uses only these colors, but it might not use all of them.
 In the Optimize panel, select one of the following options
from the Indexed Palette pop-up menu: - Adaptive
- A
custom palette derived from the actual colors in the document. Most
often produces the highest quality image.
- Web Adaptive
- An
adaptive palette in which colors are converted to the closest websafe
color. Websafe colors are those that come from the Web 216 palette.
- Web 216
- A
palette of the 216 colors common to both Windows and Mac OS computers.
This palette is often called a websafe or browser-safe palette because
it produces fairly consistent results in various web browsers on
either platform when viewed on 8-bit monitors.
- Exact
- Contains
the exact colors used in the image. Only images containing 256 or
fewer colors may use the Exact palette. Otherwise, the palette switches to
Adaptive.
- Windows and Mac OS
- Each contains the 256 colors defined
by the Windows or Mac OS platform standards, respectively.
- Grayscale
- A
palette of 256 or fewer shades of gray. Choosing this palette converts
the image to grayscale.
- Black and White
- A
two-color palette consisting only of black and white.
- Uniform
- A
mathematical palette based on RGB pixel values.
- Custom
- A palette
that has been modified or loaded from an external palette (ACT file)
or a GIF file.
You can optimize and customize color palettes using the color
table in the Optimize panel.
Import a custom paletteDo
one of the following:
Navigate to an ACT or GIF palette file and click Open.
The
colors from the ACT or GIF file are added to the color table in
the Optimize panel.
Note: Windows users must select
GIF Files from the Files Of Type pop-up menu to see files with a
.gif extension in the Open dialog box.
Select a color depth for an 8-bit imageColor depth is
the number of colors in the graphic. Reducing color depth makes a
smaller file size, but it can also reduce the image quality. When
you reduce color depth, some colors in the image are discarded,
beginning with those used least. Pixels containing discarded colors
convert to the closest color remaining in the palette.
 Do one of the following: In the Optimize
panel, select an option from the Colors pop-up menu.
Type a value (from 2 to 256) in the text box.
Note: The number at the bottom of the color table indicates
the actual number of colors visible in the image. If no number is
visible, click the Rebuild button.
Remove unused colors in an 8-bit imageThis
makes the file size smaller.
From the Optimize panel Options menu, select Remove Unused
Colors.
Include all palette colors, including those not present in the saved image Deselect Remove Unused Colors.
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