Pixie is a simple application that allows web and graphic designers to match colours. To use it, you simple mouse over a colour on your screen. Pixie will tell you the values of that colour in a range of different formats, from the CMYK values used by printers to hex, HSV, HTML and RGB values.

Pixie is a very simple tool that does one thing and does it perfectly. It is available in several formats: you can download it either as a simple app or as a ZIP file. Both of these files are free, but you can also purchase a download of the app's source code. This is a very slim piece of software, with a download of just over 10 kb. If you're looking at an image and just want to match one part of it, you can use this tool to magnify an area of your screen to match the colour of just one pixel. This tool runs in a small, separate window that displays the colour information of the selected pixel. You can map some of this app's format to keyboard shortcuts for improved convenience.


Pixie Colour Picker Download


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Bummer. So the color picker is actually from DS itself, not windows?

I've seen color picker pics from DS on a Mac, and they are different though. So DS has a different color picker for Win and Mac?

The picker in DS for Windows is pretty lame, I agree. The single biggest missing feature is an eyedropper tool, like others have already mentioned. It's really annoying having to go open things in Photoshop just to read out RGB values in a texture.

I'm just as mad as you all since I do 99% of my production work in Windows. Microsoft has not changed this palette since Bill Gates dropped his little "No one will ever need more than 640K on a computer" chestnut. I don't now much about pixie but I'll try it, anything has got to be better than the Windows picker and I use the picker constantly as part of the workflow to demarcate surfaces from one app to another.

1) Clicking the drop down box at the side of the paint pot icon. Click 'more colours'. Click the 'custom' tab. Note down the colour model reference numbers. Next select the cell that you want this colour to be applied to, follow the same process and then when in the 'custom' colour tab type in the reference numbers you had noted earlier.

Pixie is a colour picker application built for web designers, graphic designers, and other users who find themselves needing to sample colours from random places on their computer. The colour picker tool works in a way that users of apps like Adobe Photoshop would be familiar with but does not limit the user to colours that are in the app itself, as Photoshop would.

Colour picking is a useful tool for designers who might see a shade they like on a website or video, or who have been tasked with designing something within an existing branding colour scheme. Traditional methods would require the designer to pull the image into an image editor to sample the colour, but Pixie is a standalone program that allows the user to sample colours from anywhere on the computer.

Pixie presents the user with the selected colour in HTML colour code, RGB, CMYK, HSV, and hex values, so the result can be easily ported over to any graphics editing situation. Keyboard shortcuts further reduce the steps necessary to get a picked colour into an app of choice, and a built-in magnification tool makes it easy to get the exact pixels required when picking.

Pixie is a lightweight application where installation is not necessary. This makes it an ideal tool for designers (and anyone else) who often find themselves sampling colours from web pages or random images because it takes up almost no resources at runtime and does not need to be installed on your system.

The comprehensive range of formats the picked colour is displayed in, and the ease with which those formats can be extracted thanks to keyboard shortcuts, make Pixie a very effective workflow enhancement tool, regardless of the image editing software being used.

Granted there isn't a color picker in game, but I have been using a program called "ColorPic". It is free. Do a Google search for it. I use it in game by having the game run in a windowed mode. It has worked very well for me.

While im busy moving, merging making, there has been many times ive seen the picker change to the colour of the object selected and I keep thinking I realy should take note of what I did for that to happen, but then I forget about it and go back to my building.

It's either a bug or an oversight, but yes, when you select a single object and use the color picker, we should be able to see the existing RGB/Hex settings of that object. It does have those values, it's just that the devs didn't make them visible under those editor conditions.

I am adding building colours to OSM for 3D renderers.To do this I take pictures of the pertinent buildings and add the hex code to building colours and roof colours.However it is very time consuming (for me) to determine the hex code in question using

With my question I do not want to start a debate on whether or not colours are a good idea or not, but I am looking for a tool to aid me (and others) in colour analysis and if an Android app can do the job then it should be possible to the same colour analysis under windows!

Different photos of the same object will yield vastly different colour values because of lighting conditions, imaging technology, and post processing. It is therefore not a good idea to extract colour values from a photo and add them to OSM because their correctness is hard to verify. Renderers should not encourage people to engage in such tagging.

I agree that the extracted colors can vary. But if we want to add building colours, what other sources are there? Photos can be taken very easily by anyone on the ground. And I expect most people to not notice small color differences, especially in a rendered map. If we accept hardly noticeable inaccuracies in GPS coordinates then I think we can accept those for colours, too.

If you really want colours I'd suggest including a known range of colours in the image so as to perform colour correction. Alternatively just carry a colour chart: Fungus enthusiasts (Pilzfreunde) often make use of such colour charts such as -British-Fungi-Colour-Identification/dp/0114902305.

Every medium-class picture editor will do the job (e.g. gimp). Most of them have a color picker tool. Although I don't know of any program which allows you to hover over the image to see the color. Usually you have to click on the image and then extract the hex value from the color palette.

I'm fond of Logic's colour picker; it tends to group colours together in a sensible way. Having the ability to not only have those similar colours grouped together tidily but having a custom colour option would be fantastic.

Pixie is a handy colour picker tool which can get you HEX, HTML, RGB, CMYK and HSV Colour codes as you move your mouse anywhere on your computer. It comes along with magnifier if the pixels are very close to find the colour.

An easy to use, fast and small colour picker designed specially to fit the needs of webmasters and designers. Run it, simply point to the colour and it will tell you the RGB, hex, HTML-ready, CMYK and HSV values of colour. You can then use these values to reproduce the colour in your favorite programs. You can then use these values to reproduce the colour in your favorite programs. Pixie has built-in color mixer and magnify snap option. Pixie also shows the current x and y position of your mouse pointer.

Of course, you could always save a screenshot, open up Photoshop, and grab the color details that way. But, if you want to save some time, using one of these color picker tools will allow you to grab any color in any website, on desktop or mobile, without needing to leave your browser. And with the mobile apps, you can even grab color inspiration from real life!

Eye Dropper is one of the most well-rated and popular color picker extensions for Google Chrome. To pick a color, all you need to do is click on the extensions icon, click a button, and click on your preferred color.

As per thebodzio's answer, there's plenty of ways to get that colour. No matter what browser you use there will be some sort of colour picker add-on you can get. Alternatively you could take a screen shot and open it in photoshop. Another way is to open developer tools and look at the sites stylesheet, in chrome you could right click the background and hit inspect element then look for where the background colour is being specified...

To save you the trouble though, the background colour on that website is #f9f9f9 - now, if you're not too experienced with CSS, you might want to head over to the site, inspect the background colour and see if you can find where I got that from :)

2) Take screenshot of your webpage by using Print Screen button on your keyboard and paste that image in Photoshop or any other image editing software and pick color from there with color picker tool

Here, you will get a simple color picker on the AddOn bar, you need to click on that and you will get a Cross Hair cursor, click on the color you want to get the information for and you will get the below...

Obviously, you can choose whatever you want, but I found I like these settings because it keeps the color picker on top of all the other windows and is accessible from the menu bar. Since it's something I use all the time, I far prefer that over the dock icon.

This is probably the lightest, fastest color picker out there. Only 11 Kb for a portable application. 8.9 Kb with a ZIP archive. You have limited features, but consider the size, it worth every bytes of your download. Download here to try it out.

Gizmette wrote:> When I get the RGB color from the color-picker in Photoshop and adjust the fill RGB color on an object in PowerPoint, they do not print the same. What's going on? They look the same on my monitor. 

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