![]() Switch to the paint pencil tool, and paint inside the active selection EDIT just remembered you do not want anti-aliasing, use the pencil tool instead of the paint tool. Click inside the area using the fuzzy select tool to select the area inside the boundaryĢ. I'm animating a war, not changing the colors of each country (I can do that easily), they're the same color because they're fighting the same war against the Ottomans (in red, meaning they're an aggressor). (08-19-2017, 03:49 PM)dinasset Wrote: (08-19-2017, 03:11 PM)truememestar Wrote: (08-18-2017, 10:36 PM)truememestar Wrote: How do you recolor a specific color without messing up another color? If you want to create a subarea you hace to draw the new (additional) border first ![]() When selecting by (contiguous) color set threshold=0 Is this close to what you like to achieve? Used same procedure as before, recoloring parts of the dark green areas I wasn't intending to change the color of the other countries, I was attempting to color inside the dark green ones without ruining the border.Įdit: i was trying to color in parts of the dark green without ruining the border, is that a plugin? (P.S: This is a feature has, I'm on a macOS, and therefore I cannot use to complete said objective.) This annoys me quite a lot and I would like to know if such a tool exists in the Plugins category or in vanilla GIMP. (08-19-2017, 03:11 PM)truememestar Wrote: (08-18-2017, 10:36 PM)truememestar Wrote: How do you recolor a specific color without messing up another color?Įvery time I try to recolor something, it colors in the border too. If it is indexed the you can edit the color map directly for any color that is included in the map. ![]() However, there is no noticeable anti-aliasing there, so check the color mode of the original image (or is the one you posted the original?) Look at the top of the Gimp window, does it say RGB or Indexed? After cut, increase the selection by a pixel to give a clean edge & fill on a layer underneath. ![]() Often you need to cut then fill underneath to eliminate a remaining border of semi-transparent pixels - anti-aliasing used to smooth lines. There is at least one filter for replacing colors in the gmic plugin, That one might not work so well with that image.Īs dinasset described, color select, and fill works with the screenshot you posted. The stock gimp tools are in Color -> Map menu You might find something there.
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