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Edit colors in the Edit Colors dialog box
Editing colors in the
Edit Colors/Recolor Artwork dialog box is a convenient way to globally
adjust the colors in selected artwork. It is especially useful when global
colors weren't originally used in the artwork’s creation. You can
edit colors and color groups in the Edit Colors/Recolor Artwork
dialog box and apply your edits to selected artwork, or save the
edited colors for later use.
When editing colors, you use the smooth color wheel, the segmented
color wheel, or the color bars.  Editing colors by moving color markers on the smooth color
wheel
- Smooth color wheel

- Displays hue, saturation, and brightness in a smooth continuous
circle. Each color in the current color group is drawn on the wheel inside
a circle. This wheel lets you choose from numerous colors with great precision,
but it can be hard to see individual colors because every pixel
is a different color.
- Segmented color wheel

- Displays colors as a set of segmented color patches. This
wheel makes it easy to see individual colors, but doesn’t provide
as many colors to choose from as the continuous wheel.
- Color bars

- Displays only colors from the color group. They appear as
solid bars of color that you can select and edit individually. You
can reorganize colors in this display by dragging and dropping color
bars to the left or right. You can right-click a color and choose
to remove it, set it as the base color, change its shade, or change
it using the Color Picker.
For a video on creating, editing, and experimenting with color
groups, see www.adobe.com/go/lrvid4019_ai. To
see an example of changing a vibrant color illustration to a grayscale
illustration, see www.adobe.com/go/learn_ai_tutorials_depth_en.
 - A.
- Base color as it appears in Harmony Rules menu
- B.
- Base color
as it appears in color wheel
- C.
- Color
display options
- D.
- Color of selected color
marker or color bar
- E.
- Show saturation
and hue on Wheel
- F.
- Add and subtract color
marker tools
- G.
- Unlink harmony colors
Save changes to a color groupBefore you start editing your color groups, make sure that
you know how to save your changes correctly so you don’t inadvertently
overwrite your favorite color group! You have two options when saving
your changes: you can overwrite the original color group with the
edited color group, or you can create a new color group with the
changes, leaving the original intact.
 Do either of the following: To keep your
original color group unchanged and save the changes as a new color
group, click New Color Group at
the top of the Edit Colors/Recolor Artwork dialog box.
To save the changes to your original color group (thus overwriting
the original color group), click Save Changes To Color Group .
Edit a color group using a color wheelIn the Edit Colors/Recolor Artwork
dialog box, select the desired color group from the Color Groups
storage area, if necessary.
If you have selected an object on the artboard, click Recolor
Art to preview the colors on the artwork. If you don’t want to recolor
the artwork, deselect Recolor Art before closing the dialog box,
or click Cancel to close it.
Note: To edit the colors of the
selected artwork, click Get Colors From Selected Art  .
To confine colors to a swatch library, click the Limits The
Color Group To Colors In A Swatch Library button and
choose a library from the list.
To change the base color to a different color in the current
group, right-click the color in a color wheel or color bars and
choose Set As Base Color. Or click a color in the Active Colors
box, and then click Set Current Color As Base Color to
the left of the Active Colors box.
Drag a marker on the wheel to change its color. If the harmony
is linked, all the colors move according to the rule as you drag.
If the harmony is unlinked, only the marker that you drag moves.
While
editing, you can do any of the following:
To change
hue, move the marker around the wheel. To change saturation or brightness,
move it inward and outward on the wheel.
To add a color, right-click in the color wheel where you
want to add the color and choose Add New Color.
To remove a color, right-click on the color marker (or the
line of the marker) in the color wheel and choose Remove Color.
To change a color using the Color Picker, right-click the
color and choose Color Picker.
To constrain the marker to move in only one direction, hold
down the shift key as you drag.
To see hue and saturation instead of hue and brightness on
the wheel, click the Show Saturation And Hue On The Wheel button , directly
below the wheel to toggle between the two views.
To change the color values manually, click the color marker
or click the color in the Active Colors box. Edit the color values
using the sliders or color value text boxes under the color wheel.
To change the saturation and brightness of a color on the
wheel, right-click a color marker, and choose Select Shade; then
click the desired color in the box that appears.
Save your changes by clicking New Color Group , which
keeps your original color group unchanged and saves the changes
as a new color group. Or click Save Changes To Color Group to
overwrite your original color group with the changes.
Note: To ensure that the colors are in gamut or web safe, select
each color marker and click the Out Of Gamut  or
Out Of Web  buttons
as necessary.
Reorder colors in a color group Do one of the following: In the Active
Colors menu, drag a color left or right.
In Color Bars view, drag a color bar left or right.
Edit an individual color in a color groupWhen you use
a harmony rule to create a color group, the colors are linked by default.
When a color group is linked, editing one color changes the other
colors according to the harmony rule. To edit one color without
changing the others, unlink the color markers from the harmony rule. View full size graphic - A.
- Color wheel view of linked colors
- B.
- Color
wheel view of unlinked colors
- C.
- Color
bars view of linked colors
- D.
- Color
bars view of unlinked colors
- E.
- Colors
linked, click to unlink
- F.
- Colors
unlinked, click to relink
In the Edit Colors/Recolor Artwork dialog box, select
the color group you want to edit and click Edit.
Click the Unlink Harmony Colors icon .
Do one of the following in either the color wheel or color
bar view:
Drag the color marker you want to edit
to set a new color.
Click the color bar or color marker you want to change and
manually edit the color values.
Double-click (or right-click) the color bar or marker and
choose a new color in the Color Picker.
Right-click a color marker or color bar and pick a new shade.
To relink the colors so that the markers move again according
to the newly defined harmony rule, click the Link Harmony Colors
button.
Edit colors in a color group using the Color PickerYou can use the Color Picker to change
colors in a color group.
In the Edit
Colors/Recolor Artwork dialog box, do one of the following:
Double-click a wheel marker or right-click a wheel marker
and choose Color Picker.
Double-click a color bar.
Click the color swatch to the left of the color sliders.
Save the edits by doing one of the following:
To save the edited colors as a new group, type a new name
in the name box at the top of the dialog box, and then click New
Color Group .
To save the edits to the original color group, click Save
Changes To Color Group .
Randomly change color order or saturation and brightnessIn the Edit Colors/Recolor Artwork dialog box, you can
explore random variations of the current color group by using the
Randomly Assign Brightness And Saturation button and the Randomly
Change Color Order button.
In the Edit Colors/Recolor Artwork dialog box, select
a color group.
Click Edit, and then click Display Color Bars; or click Assign.
Do either of the following:
To randomly change
the brightness and saturation of the current color group while retaining
the hues, click Randomly Change Color Order .
To shuffle the order of the current color group, click Randomly
Changes Saturation And Brightness . Use
this button when recoloring artwork to quickly explore the different
ways artwork can be recolored with the current color group.
Globally edit saturation, brightness, temperature, or luminosityIn the Edit Colors/Recolor Artwork dialog box,
click Edit.
Click the Color Mode button , and
choose Global Adjust.
Change the values for Saturation, Brightness, Temperature,
and Luminosity.
Note: If you’ve limited the colors to a swatch
library, any adjustments you make are limited to the library colors.
Add or remove colors in a color groupIn the Edit Colors/Recolor Artwork dialog
box, click Edit.
Do either of the following:
To add a color
to the color group, right-click in the color wheel where you want
to add the color and choose Add New Color. If you click the line
of an existing color marker, the new marker moves with that marker.
To remove a color, right-click the color marker or color
bar and choose Remove Color. You cannot remove the base color marker.
Note: In
the color wheel, you can also use the Add Color Tool button  or
the Remove Color Tool button  , and
then click in the color wheel on the color you want to add or remove.
To remove a color from a color group in the Color Groups
list, expand the color group, right-click the color swatch you want
to remove, and choose Remove Color.
Delete a color group Select
a color group in the Color Groups list and click Delete . Or
right-click and choose Remove Color Group.
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