To do so I have to go to circle 1 change the fill to gradient (the small buttons underneath the big ones) and then back to fill and mysteriously it will change the color. I have to select the object and select the the color. There is one way I could manage to change the color but this is extremely annoying and inconvenient. I searched now every post that I could find to this topic but non gave me any solution. This happens to any kind of object I want to change the color by eyedropper. What happens is the following: the color is only changed in the color panel of the tool bar on the right (see image circle 2) and in the color panel of the tool bar on the left (see image circle 1) but not in the real object (see image red arrow, the fill of the stars, circle 3). When I want to change the color of an object (either fill or stroke) with the eyedropper tool I usually hold shift to pick only the color and the object will display the new color. I guess it could also work with text layers, where this mode would pick up both the typography style of the layer and the color.I have a problem with my Illustrator CS6. In case multiple styles are assigned to the “source” (fill + stroke + effects) I guess the easiest would be to copy all of them over to the target object. See attached schema for a visual explanation. This way I could assign styles to objects on the canvas much quicker. My improvement idea is that with an additional modifier key that you can press after entering the eyedropper selection mode, you could enable a “pick up style” mode instead. Often times, another element with the needed styling is already somewhere on the canvas, and I would like to be able to copy that style from this element however the eyedropper tool only picks up hardcoded color values. The only way to do this now is to move with the mouse to the right panel and search/select the style from the menus. One small issue I have while working in Figma is that I sometimes want to assign a certain style to my current selection. Say goodbye to the reload button In Stylizer, your changes are immediately displayed in all browsers, in real-timeliterally as you type or move the mouse. Illustrator works this way - “global” colors (equivalent to color styles) are applied when an object styled with one is clicked with the eyedropper tool. Stylizer Features Real-time CSS Bullseye DOM NEW Workflow Toolbelt Extras Real-time CSS Immediate feedback saves countless hours. The proposed workflow would be: click the object you want to style, press Ctrl-C, click the already-styled object. With the current functionality, if you want to apply the same color style to another object, you first have to click the already-styled object to see what style is applied (assuming you may have multiple similar shades and can’t eyeball it), then click the object you want to style, and then find that color style in the list and apply it. If you do want to be able to pick the pixel color instead of the style, there could be an additional modifier key to hold while clicking. (You could click the stroke to apply the stroke’s color style, or the fill to apply the fill’s color style.) Instead, the color picker should apply the color style of the clicked object if it has one. This can lead to messy colors not adhering to your style guide. When using the color picker, if the object you’re picking from has a color style applied, the color picker doesn’t apply that style to the selected object - it just applies the hex value (or whatever color model you have set) of the pixel you click.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |