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PHOTOSHOP FEATURES

Change colours of an image with Photoshop.

Change colours in your image to achieve a creative look, make subjects and backgrounds pop or even change the hue of someone’s eyes. Adjust colours easily with these techniques.

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Flawless colours in fewer steps.

Use Adjust Colours to detect the most prominent colours across the image and then change their hue, saturation and lightness with on-canvas controls.

Swap colours several ways with Photoshop.

A great way to add style to an image is to apply a different colour to an area to make it stand out or change colours in the image entirely. But before you start experimenting with the rainbow, you’ll want to understand the three basic elements that make up colour in Photoshop. Hue describes the colour you are using — like blue, green or red. Saturation describes the intensity of the colour. And lightness is how light or dark the colour is.

Use adjustment layer to change colours just right.

Change a colour in your image easily by adding a Hue/Saturation adjustment layer. This is a non-permanent change you can undo any time.

Add an overall tint with a Solid Colour layer.

To splash on a wash of colour, add a new fill layer. Choose Solid Colour or Gradient, then change your blend mode from Normal to Colour and adjust opacity.

Nix no-no colours from your entire image.

Make permanent, global colour changes via Image › Adjustments › Replace Colour. Use the Adobe Color Picker or HSL sliders to perfect your tweaks.

Paint on new hues with a Brush tool.

Select the Colour Replacement tool by holding down the Brush tool. Then choose the colour you’d like to replace and manually paint over it with a new colour.

Choose which hues to target with your changes.

Photoshop makes it easy to fine-tune which colours you target when you need to change colour of image online while on the go or on your desktop. Whether you’re using a Hue/Saturation adjustment layer or working with the Replace Colour tool, you can focus in on either a narrow or wide swath of hues depending on your desired outcome.

Select all similarly coloured objects.

Choose Select › Colour Range to make a more complex, colour-based selection across your entire image. Use the Eyedropper tool to pick a hue to target.

Perfect your Colour Range selection.

When using the Colour Range or Replace Colour tools, adjust the Fuzziness slider to change how wide of a range of colours will be included in your selection.

How to change colours of an image in Photoshop.

For most projects, using the Hue/Saturation adjustment layer to change colours of image elements is the way to go. This adds a non-destructive change to your work, which means your original pixels are intact and you can adjust or remove the change at any time.

  1. Click the Adjust colours button in the Contextual Task Bar. Photoshop will analyse the image and display the six most prominent colours.
  2. Select the colour you wish to edit or use the eye dropper tool to identify and choose another specific colour.
  3. Use the on-canvas slider controls to modify the hue, saturation and lightness of that colour and see how it changes throughout the canvas. An adjustment layer will be automatically created over the targeted colour to allow non-destructive editing. You may choose multiple colours to adjust.
  4. For additional controls and refinement, navigate to the Properties panel. The Hue-Saturation-Lightness sliders are also present here, as well as colour swatches that display before-and-after comparative results for easy visual reference. Use the colour range tool to precisely refine the adjustment.

Tutorials to help you to colour your world.

Looking for more ways to change colours of image elements? Try out some methods for more professional colour matching edits and increasing saturation in isolated areas.

Explore advanced colour matching.

Try this professional product photography technique to apply a new colour to an object in your image. This method lets you add a new colour fill that most precisely matches a specific hue.

Up the saturation in just one area.

Use the Sponge tool to quickly increase or decrease the saturation on only one object. You’ll manually paint on the saturation wherever you need it using your cursor as the brush.

FAQs about how to change image colours in Photoshop.