you click on the black box in front of the white box under all the tools.
The GIMP color may not be changing due to a variety of reasons, such as the selected layer not being editable, the color mode being set to grayscale, or the color being locked. Check these settings and make sure they are adjusted accordingly to change the color in GIMP.
You may give this site a try http://www.picnik.com/If this does not solve your problem then you can download GIMP. It is a free image editing program, and you can change the color of the eyes by selecting them and going to Colors > ColorifyYou can download GIMP from here:http://www.gimp.org/downloads/
Do you have GIMP, PhotoShop or something like that? If you don't, go and download GIMP now. It's probably the best program for changing the look in StarShine. Then you can open GIMP, and choose to open a file. Then you go into the Data-map again and there will be a lot of pictures. Just click on one of them, and change it anyway you like.
im sorry. But you cant. They stay that color. Yeah you can. It has something to do with a program called GIMP but it's REALLY complicated!!!
http://www.gimp.org/tutorials/Selective_Color/ http://downloads.sourceforge.net/gimp-win/gimp-2.6.6-i686-setup.exe
To change the language on GIMP, go to Edit > Preferences > Interface > Language. From there, you can choose the language you want to use by selecting it from the drop-down menu.
To effectively match colors in GIMP, use the Eyedropper tool to select a color from an existing image. Then, use the Color Picker tool to choose a new color that matches the selected color. Adjust the hue, saturation, and brightness as needed to achieve the desired color match.
First : make sure the pic is in RBG mode. Second : "colorize" it. That give just one color - so you'll have to sectionalize the picture and change that color ... I suggest you use "curves" to do that.
The maximum color depth supported by GIMP in 32-bit mode is 32 bits per channel, allowing for a total of 96 bits per pixel.
Try "curves" (under color - under levels).
that same thing happened to me....turns out, I had the mode set the "Greyscale" instead of "RGB" change it....check that. that may be your solution too
To adjust the white balance in GIMP for better color accuracy in photos, go to the "Colors" menu, select "Color Balance" or "Levels," and adjust the sliders for red, green, and blue channels until the colors look more natural.