: How can I change colors of a B&W graphic in Photoshop? I have a black & white graphic, which I want to turn into a blue & yellow. Black → blue, white → yellow I can do
I have a black & white graphic, which I want to turn into a blue & yellow.
Black → blue,
white → yellow
I can do the first part by creating a solid color layer and change the blending options to "lighten", but then I have a blue & white image.
I have a vague idea that I should select highlights and shadows, resp., and turn the selections into masks for a solid color layer, but I don't know how to do this. Also, I'm not sure this is the best route to go.
Photoshop is version CS6.
EDIT:
I think I found it, but I'm not completely satisfied yet.
In the "select" menu I select "color range" and then "shadows". I then add a mask using the selection. I make that layer yellow. Underneath I place a solid blue layer.
The problem is that the edges are very hard and jagged, like when you convert an 8-bit grayscale to an indexed color image. So the mask seems to consist of black and white only. Any ideas how to solve this?
More posts by @Annie732
1 Comments
Sorted by latest first Latest Oldest Best
The way I would do this is using a 'Gradient Map' adjustment layer.
First make sure the Adjustments panel is visible. Go to 'Window → Adjustments' and make sure 'Adjustments' is checked.
Click 'Gradient Map' in the 'Adjustments' panel.
Click the gradient in the pop-out(Properties panel), and edit. There will be default
options, but you can click to edit any of them. Right hand side =
black, left side = white.
You can click on the layer in 'Layers' to edit as you need. You can
also edit how sharp of a drop off the gradient has... IE. where the
parts between white/black become a combination of your new color
combo. This isn't a hard re-color, but as it states a 'mapping' of a
'gradient', so it might not be the exact result you were hoping for.
Give it a shot.
Final result:
Terms of Use Create Support ticket Your support tickets Stock Market News! © vmapp.org2024 All Rights reserved.