Many people use Adobe Photoshop for photo editing, but you may not realize how else you can use it. If you like to color, you can turn any line drawing (also known as line art) into a fun coloring project with Photoshop.

Method 1
Method 1 of 2:

Setting Up

  1. There are many places online where you can locate free line art. Just use your search engine and search for "line art" or "lineart."
    • If you have a particular interest, search for the line art and the topic. Such as "anime line art". Anime has fans all over the world and will have a lot of line art.
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  3. Click the small icon at the bottom for "Load Channel as Selection".
  4. You might choose 'Line art', for example. This has the dual purpose of changing the background to a layer and identifying the layer.
  5. Name it "Color." Color is an arbitrary name simply meant to identify the use of the layer. If you have different naming conventions, feel free to use them.
  6. White is a good one, but any light color you choose to use will work.
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Method 2
Method 2 of 2:

Keeping It Inside the Lines

  1. Be sure to save the image in the native PSD format. This will preserve the layer structure.
  2. What this has done is isolate the part that you are going to fill in.
  3. Red or yellow are good choices.
  4. Don't worry if you see pieces that didn't get selected. A large, hard brush is good for that.
  5. Clean up so that every part of the image that you will want to color is covered up with a color.
  6. This is what keeps you from coloring outside of the line art.
    • Be advised that you won't color outside of the line art, but this method will not keep you within the lines inside of the line art. For that, you need to make further selections.
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      Tips

      • If you find yourself coloring line art more than a couple of times, it's a good idea to make the process into a Photoshop action.
      • When you export it, do it in a format that will preserve transparency, like PNG or GIF.
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