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Colour Styling: Creating a Night Palette
A character usually has one colour palette, but sometimes, you might want to have a set of different colour shades for different ambiances, such as: night, sunny, rainy or cold. It is time-consuming to repaint everything and having two independent palettes is not really efficient. As an alternative, Toon Boom Digital Pro provides the clone palettes. The clone palette is a special copy of the master palette. The colours in each palette have the same identification number pointing to the same colour zones, but the names and RGBA values can be modified. Depending on the active palette (master or clone), the drawing’s colours will automatically update in consequence. So there is no need to repaint the animation, but simply to load the right clone palette (palette style). The night palette is a popular choice when a scene or sequence changes from day to night. In this article, you will learn how to create a night colour style from a character’s master palette, using the Clone Palette feature. ![]() Refer to the Basic Concepts chapter of the Toon Boom Digital Pro Introduction and Basic book to learn more about Colours and Palettes. What Do You Need to Create a Night Palette Style?You need the following:
Colour Model and Master PaletteBefore starting to create a night palette style for a character, you need to have a colour model, which is a representative drawing of your character painted with its master palette. You will also need the character’s master palette to apply the Clone Palette feature on it to create the new style palette.
Refer to the Colour Styling and Colour Model chapter of the Toon Boom Digital Pro User Guide to learn more about Colour Models and Master Palettes. Creating a Night Colour StyleYou are now ready to create a night colour style from your character’s master palette. To create a night colour style:
Your character’s night palette is now ready to use. By default, Toon Boom Digital Pro uses the first palette in the list for the scene. To switch from day to night palette, simply change the ordering of the Palette list using the Move Up / Move Down buttons. ![]() |