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Ogunnowo857

: How to Change White to Black Inside of a Vector Image Using Photoshop I created a logo using Illustrator but when I tried to change all of the whites to blacks it became a nightmare because

@Ogunnowo857

Posted in: #AdobePhotoshop #Color #Logo #Vector

I created a logo using Illustrator but when I tried to change all of the whites to blacks it became a nightmare because of how many layers I'm using - I figured that Photoshop must have an better way.

Basically, I just need to change all the white areas in the logo (the lines in the swords, the shield, the helmet, etc.) to black so that it creates the illusion of transparency. I don't need to change the color of the text (Knights basketball academy). How do I do this?

Thank you.

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@Debbie163

All the other answers work fine. I too suggest you to use Illustrator when you can, especially Rishab.Ag's tips in his answer; it's really the fast way to do it!

But maybe for some reason you need to do it in Photoshop and I want to add a ultra-simple trick that you'll probably use in many other situations.


PS: This is not a solution if your logo is an object, but a good solution if you really copy/paste your logo in Photoshop and
simply want a quick way to fix it.




From my understanding, you want to get rid of the white ONLY in the graphic, not the text.

1 - You can use the Magic Wand Tool, with a tolerance of 64 (see top menu for this). Select a white area anywhere in your image.

2 - Then, go in the menu "select", and choose "similar". All whites will
be selected.





3 - After this, click on the Rectangular Marquee Tool

While holding the "option/alt" key, trace a rectangle around the white text in your logo. When you do this, it tells Photoshop to remove what you're now selecting from your total selection.

This means you will only have the white from the graphic selected after this.

The green rectangle shows what to select while holding the "option" key down. Even if you forget some areas or didn't trace a perfect rectangle, just trace another one while holding the "alt/option" key; it will remove anything you'll select until you stop pressing that key!



4 - Finally, use the "Eyedropper" tool, select the black color of your background, and press the "X" key to make it switch to the background color in your swatches; then simply press the "delete" (backspace) and "command" at the same time. The selected area will be filled with the background color you selected.

Pressing "X" is just a shortcut to make the foreground/background colors switch position. And pressing "delete/backspace" + "Command" is another shortcut to fill the selected area with the background colors from the swatches. I guess it's like a paint bucket (I never use paint bucket and such...)

If you prefer to remove the white color, simply click "delete". You can always add a black layer under this one too to keep that transparency for later.

Additionally, on smaller logos, sometimes the wand tool does a very bad job at selecting the pixels and anti-aliasing. You can either increase your "tolerance" to include more pixels OR you can always expand your selection by 1 pixel to grab more anti-aliasing.



Is the result above what you were looking for? This is one way to do it. Using the alt/option key to remove some selection is very useful! I actually prefer to use the technique above instead of clicking every single area... It's way faster and you can use the lasso tool or polygonal lasso tool as well to deselect some areas.

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@Si6392903

If you're set on using Photoshop, you can do this: move all the "white areas" into one layer, then export to Photoshop. It should show up as a single raster layer. You can then just hit Crtl+i to invert it (change to black). Alternately, you can lock the transparency on that layer, then paint it with a solid brush set to 100% opacity.

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@Kevin459

let show you very easy way to change colour in Photoshop. Suppose you have an object(X) to which you want to give new colour, OK now take a new layer above such layer & draw roughly another object, i.e.(Y) & fill it with colour which colour you wanted to fill. make sure that drawn object(Y) must be covered below object(X). Now select drawn object(Y) layer & press ctrl + Alt + G. Do same with the object to which you wanted to give new colour.

That's it ! This is the easiest way to change colour in Photoshop.

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@Megan533

I believe it's easier to do in Illustrator, but you need to merge your layers.

Responding to your question regarding Photoshop, if your layers are merged in one "Dynamic object", try to rasterize it.

To select the white color in photoshop, go to the menu Select/Color range and use the provided Eyedropper and point on a white area. Then you get the white selected, you can do ctrl+j (on windows) or cmd+j (on mac) to get a new layer with the white areas, then you can customize the color.

Allthough i recommend Illustrator, it's way cleaner for your case.

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@Holmes874

You can do this a lot easier in illustrator:
here's the trick


select a single white object(which you want to change it to black)
Now GO TO Select > Same > Fill Color it will automatically select all the white area.
Now Simply change the color to black. Simple!


you can lock your text layer first So it wont get selected incidentally.

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