Thursday, October 24th, 2013

Help! My Photoshop Color Picker looks weird

How to get the color picker to look the way you want it to look

or How to fix the Color Picker when it looks all funky

Sometimes when you open the color picker in Photoshop it looks one way and other times it looks a different way. It might even seem like there is  no rhyme or reason to how it looks and that it changes without (what it may seem like) no input from you.

Of course, nothing could be further from the truth but knowing that won’t solve the problem of why it changes and how to change it back!

To change it, don’t go looking under Preferences for all the Color Picker choices. While some preferences can be found in the Preference area the secret changes are made inside the Color Picker itself.

To see them at work, click to open the Color Picker. What you see here depends on what is clicked in the right of the dialog (when you realize this everything becomes blindingly obvious).

Click H for Hue to see this:

And S for Saturation to see this:

And B for Brightness to see this:

Each of R, G and B make the picker look different:


As does choosing L or a or b:

And each looks different if you have the Only Web Colors dialog checked:

Now you know what affects how the Color Picker looks you can choose the one that makes the most sense to you.

Helen Bradley

Tuesday, March 26th, 2013

Lightroom Tip – Pick a color from your Image

Learn to sample a color from your image

Sometimes when you need to grab a color in Lightroom you’d really like to use a color sampled from your image. This is easy to do.

In any situation where you have access to the Color Picker, click on the color swatch to open the Color Picker and hold your mouse over it. Press the left mouse button to get the Eyedropper but don’t let go – instead move out of the dialog and over the image and sample your color from there.

Helen Bradley