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Assign colors to your artwork
The
Assign tab of the Edit Colors/Recolor Artwork dialog box lets you
assign colors from a color group to your artwork. You can assign
colors in the following ways: Assign new colors to your
artwork using a color group from the Color Groups list.
Assign
new colors to your artwork using a new color group chosen from the Harmony
Rules menu.
Reassign
current artwork colors among themselves. You can reset the Edit Colors/Recolor
Artwork dialog box so that the artwork is displayed with its original
colors by clicking Get Colors From Selected Art .
 Original artwork colors (top), assigning new colors by selecting
a color group in the Color Groups list (center), and assigning new
colors by creating a new color group using the Harmony Rules menu
(bottom).
Using
the Current Colors and New columns, you control how colors are assigned. When
you select Recolor Art, the selected artwork is recolored with the
active color group according to the columns assignments.
View full size graphic - A.
- Active color group
- B.
- Get Colors
From Selected Art
- C.
- Colors from selected
artwork
- D.
- New colors from active
color group
- E.
- Options for working
with entire rows
- F.
- Recolor Artwork
For a video on assigning
colors, see www.adobe.com/go/vid0061.
Assign new colors to selected artwork- Select the artwork you want to recolor.
- Choose
Edit > Edit Colors > Recolor Artwork.
The
Recolor Artwork dialog box opens, displaying the Assign area with
colors from the original artwork in both columns.
- If
you want to assign colors from a color group, do one of the following:
Choose
a color group from the Color Groups list.
Create
a color group by selecting a new harmony rule from the menu from
the Harmony Rules menu.
Note: If
you create a color group, you can click Edit to fine-tune the colors,
and then click Assign. Or, if you want to adjust a few colors in
the selected artwork, select the color you want to adjust and edit
it with the color sliders.
- To
preview the color changes in your artwork, click Recolor Art.
- Do
any of the following to reassign colors:
To
assign a current color to a different color, drag the current color
up or down in the Current Colors column until it’s adjacent to the
new color you want.
 If a row contains multiple
colors and you want to move them all, click the selector bar  at
the left of the row and drag up or down.
To
assign a new color to a different row of current colors, drag the
new color up or down in the New column. (To add a new color to or
remove a color from the New column, right-click in the list and
choose Add New Color or Remove Color.)
To
change a color in the New column, right-click it and choose Color
Picker to set a new color.
To
exclude a row of current colors from being reassigned, click the
arrow between
the columns. To include it again, click the dash.
To
exclude a single current color from being reassigned, right-click
the color and choose Exclude Colors, or click the icon .
To
randomly reassign colors, click the Randomly Change Color Order button . The
New colors move randomly to different rows of current colors.
To
add a row to the Current Colors column, right-click and choose Add
A Row, or click the icon .
- To
separate or merge colors in the Current Colors row, do either of
the following:
To
separate colors into separate rows, select the color block you want
to move and right-click and choose Separate Colors Into Different
Rows, or click the icon .
To
merge colors into one row, Shift-click to select multiple colors,
and then right-click and choose Merge Colors Into A Row, or click
the icon .
- To
change tints or shades of new colors, click the triangle next to
the right of a new color (or right-click a color and choose Colorize
Method), and choose an option. Select Apply To All if you want the
same option to apply to all new colors in the color group.
Note: Tints
And Shades and Hue Shift are only available when you choose not
to preserve spot colors.
- Click
OK to recolor the artwork. If you don’t want to recolor the artwork,
click Cancel, or deselect Recolor Artwork and click OK.
Randomly change saturation and brightness in all colors- If
necessary, select an object and choose Edit > Edit Colors >
Recolor Artwork.
- In
the Edit Colors/Recolor Artwork dialog box, click the Randomly Change Saturation
and Brightness button
. Note: You
can also change saturation and brightness when editing a color group using
the Color Bars display.
View original colors in your artwork as you assign new colorsWhen
you recolor selected artwork, the colors in the selected color group
replace the original colors. When assigning new colors, it helps
to see where an original color (from the Current Colors column)
appears in your artwork, especially if your artwork is very detailed,
or contains many original colors.
- If
necessary, select an object and choose Edit > Edit Colors >
Recolor Artwork.
- In
the Recolor Artwork dialog box, click the Click On Colors Above
To Find Them In Artwork button
, and
then click a color in the Current Colors column. The
artwork that uses that color appears in full color on the artboard
while all other areas of the selected artwork are dimmed.
- Click
the icon again to return your artwork to full color.
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