


|

Go to "Adjust" >> "Hue and Saturation" >> "Colorize". Move the tabs to your desired colour and to how much colour you want on your image and click "OK".

And that's it! Here's the finished colourized image. You can also choose the other options from the "Hue and Saturation" section.


Go to the side bar of your PSPX and click on the icon above the "Eraser Tool". Select the "Change To Target" tool. See the bar at the top and make the hardness to around "20" and the opacity to "40". You can change these settings to what you think suits the image best and how much colour you want.

So take that brush, and start to colourize your image. From the top toolbar, I changed the hardness to around "20" and opacity to "40".

Find the "Color Replacer" tool in the same area where you found the other tool.

Right click on the layer and select "Duplicate", then select that layer. Click on a colour in the colour pallete, and click on an area of your image you want to colourize. This will colourize the pixels which has the same colour pixels.

Right click on the layer and select "Duplicate", select that layer, then make the opacity to a lower number. Now go to "Adjust" >> "Color" >> "Red/Green/Blue...".

Change the settings like this (or to what you like):

Now your image should look brighter and similar to this:

Once again, deplicate the last layer, but this time change the mode to "Overlay" and the opacity to "55". Switch back to the "Change To Target" tool, and colour the background.

And that's it! You can add loads more stuff onto it, like make a slightly blurred effect, add brushes, and soften and shapern some areas of the image. Here's how my one turned out:

Image credit: Click here
|
|
|
|
|
| |
|
|
|
![]() |
Copyright © to Jijy - sugaryparadise.net 06-08. All rights reserved.