Want to match colors from another part of your project? This is helpful when you want everything to have a cohesive look and flow. Color Picker, your name is lame but you are cool. Now that we’ve got the cow ungrouped, we can proceed with changing his colors just like we did when we turned the clover red. Does your image have a big square around it? That’s so annoying, isn’t it? Even more annoying? You have to make “cut lines” for it. You can also go to the top of the screen to “Object” and then choose “Ungroup”. To change a single part of this complex image: Select the cow, right click and choose “UNGROUP”. If I just try to change his colors, like we did above, he turns a solid color. How cute is this cow from the Lettering Delights Cowabunga cut it set? Answer: Very. Great, Joy, but what if your design is more complex, how do you change just a few colors among the many? Glad you asked! Scroll down and let’s talk about that next. Next, I clicked on red from the paint palette on the right. I selected the clover on the right, which was originally green like the one on the left. To change the color of the clover from green to red, I opened up the “Fill Color” window by clicking on the spilled paint can icon. Here I’ve imported a clover from the Luck of the Irish set from Lettering Delights. Here’s how… (this works for the Silhouette Cameo and other Silhouette models too) You never know when you might need a red clover. Using “Fill Color” in the Silhouette Software opens up so many unique options for you! You can change the color of almost anything that you have.
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