![]() Zoom in and go back over the places that you didn't get right the first time. It should be two steps, one to undo the unselect and another to undo the color change. ![]() Either press Ctrl+Z a few times or go up to Edit>Undo until you're back to your red-colored selection. This is totally normal and I go through it about 23894924293 times, especially with this character because of her stupid skin. I wasn't too happy about her skin color, and also you can see that I missed some spots when I was selecting it. Take the Selection tool (two above the Brush Selection - and above the Magic Wand) and click out of the image so you can see your work. After you close the Hue-changer menu, you'll still have it with the marching ants nonsense. To be honest, I had to fiddle with unselecting everything. When you feel like you've got it right, you should sort of remember the numbers you chose, or write them down, because YOU ARE NOT DONE. The Hue is what changes the base color of the selection and. Here I brought down the saturation and changed the hue, from skin color to DARK ELF BLUE. It's also impossible to get colors from pure white or black so uh.don't do that. It's hard to get the right look if you want bright red and you started out with a pale yellow, for instance. When making dolls that I know I want to modify, I take care in choosing color options that would be closest to what I was getting at - especially with Saturation and Brightness. It'll open up a window like this and you can start fiddling with the Hue, Saturation, and Brightness. (Seriously I was falling in love with Fire Alpaca more and more throughout this) It's even the same shortcut as in Photoshop. Here's where you find the hue changer in your menu.
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