![]() ![]() The names are taken from two files, the first one being color palette by Resene Paints Ltd., the second one being X11 color palette (to the best of my knowledge). When you pick a color, it gets automatically added to the list of colors and is given a name. If you want the surrounding pixels maintaining their contribution to average value and then drop off at the farther end, choose “Cubic”. “Oversample” is how many pixels around the mouse pointer are used to calculate the average color value, and “Falloff” controls how much these pixels influence the result depending on the distance from the center.įor example, if you want the selected amount of pixels around mouse pointer to affect the result equally, choose “None”. There are two controls for that: the “Oversample” slider and the “Falloff” list. Gpick can optionally take pixels surrounding the color picker’s cursor into consideration. When you move mouse (or stylus) cursor around, it will be closely followed by magnified representation of the area surrounding the current location of the mouse pointer: The picker is activated by clicking a button with an eye-drop icon in the lower right corner of the main window. Even though it looks like Gpick’s developer decided to implement half of Photoshop in a “while at that” fashion, everything still starts with the color picker which works very nicely, in a desktop-wide fashion, so you can pick colors from wherever your fancies take you :)
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