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[In Elements 1, this tool is found at the #6 position
in the toolbox.]
The paint bucket will recolor pixels of any color you click
on to be the current foreground color. The foreground color
is selected by clicking on the foreground color square in the toolbox and using the
Color Picker, by clicking any color with the eyedropper tool, or by clicking a swatch
in the Swatches palette.
If you want to fill a limited area, make a selection before
choosing the paint bucket tool. Only pixels within that
selection will be recolored.
If you want to completely fill a selection or layer you
may prefer using the Edit > Fill dialog which gives more
options. You can also use shortcuts of Alt-backspace to
fill a selection with the foreground color, Alt-Shift-Backspace
to fill only areas containing pixels (leaving transparent
areas untouched), Ctrl-Backspace to fill with the background
color, and Ctrl-Shift-Backspace to fill only areas containing
pixels with the background color.
Note - if your Alt key does not appear to be working
in Elements, you may have another program running in the
background that has taken over that key. GuruNet (Atomica)
and FlySwat are two such applications. Uninstall them, or
reassign the hot key in those programs to regain use of
the Alt key in Elements.
Please note that the paint bucket tool cannot be used with
images in 1 bit Bitmap mode color mode.
The keyboard shortcut for this tool is the letter K.
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The illustration below is the paint bucket’s options bar
(split in two to avoid stretching the window). The box titled
Mode, and showing Normal contains a drop down menu of all
the blend modes available for how the applied
colors will interact with the current colors. The Opacity
value can be set by either typing a number in the text box, or
by using a slider. To access this slider, click on the arrow to
the right of the value box, and drag.
In the box titled Tolerance, the number entered will determine
if a color is close enough to the selected one to be recolored.
You can enter value from 0 to 255 with higher numbers causing
a broader range of shades to be included, and recolored. Choose
Anti-aliased for smoother
edges on the newly colored areas.
If Contiguous is not checked, any pixels of the clicked-on
color will be recolored. If checked, only pixels adjacent to the
one clicked will be recolored
Check the All Layers box to evaluate colors from all layers
when looking for which pixels to recolor. When unchecked, only
colors on the active layer which are the same color as
the one clicked with the paint bucket, will be filled with the
new color.
The third illustration shows the options bar when Pattern
has been chosen from the Fill menu. That menu only has
two options; Foreground, and Pattern. By clicking on the pattern
thumbnail, you will find the patterns palette.
If you want to create your own pattern, make a rectangular
marquee selection of a small area that you would like to use,
and choose Edit > Define Pattern. You will be asked to name
it, and it will then appear in the patterns pop-up palette shown
below.
If you have doodled with a tool’s options and want to get back
to the default settings, click that tool’s icon at the far left
end of its options bar. Choose either Reset Tool to reset only
the current tool, or Reset All Tools to restore default settings
to every tool.
Please note that all descriptions, and illustrations featured
refer to files which are in Photoshop’s .psd format, and which
are in RGB color mode. Other file formats, and color modes may
generate different options. Some Photoshop features are not available
for images not in .psd format, or RGB color mode. To find what
color mode your image is in, choose Image > Mode.