![]() ![]() This would greatly facilitate using external colour tools such as pickers. I would like to be able to set a colour swatch's colour from a hexadecimal string that encodes RGB values (e.g: #ff0000). ![]() I would like to edit colour swatches primarily with sliders, colour wheels/cubes and have the option to enter various values via text inputs.I would like to be able to add, duplicate, modify and delete colour swatches within a colour palette.(if you don't know what I'm talking about see this or this or this) This should use techniques such as complementary, compound, analogous, monochromatic, triad, and shades to generate a set number of colour swatches given a base colour. Optionally, I would like to have access to a palette wizard that uses colour theory to automatically and easily generate entire palettes.I would like to be able to save/export/transfer a colour palette for use in other Revit projects.Each palette should have its own user definable name and function as a holder for a collection of colour swatches. Ability to create, duplicate, modify and delete colour palettes.I would like to see the following features: It is time that we got a modern, easy to use and highly functional colour picker and colour palette manager in Revit as the current functionality is no longer adequate. We have scope here to define 48 colors that get used on a daily basis, the actual solution may not be a simple one but if implemented it would be a great way to cut out a lot of wasted time on projects. I know you can define your own custom colours via the ini file but that's not ideal. Word offers something like this where they have different palette styles defined and you simply pick the one you want to use. it would be really useful (for us at least) if there were a method to load in different palette of colors. I can imagine how the conversation went back in '97 'just pick some random colors for now, we'll change them later on to something better', nearly 20 years later I'm sure it must be almost on someone's to-do list.Īnyway, back to the IDEA. All in a thoroughly useless palette of colors. we then have a couple of yellows that same, with orange, teal and some insipid yellowy green color following suit. If we look at the greens that exist on rows 1-3 - there are 5 colors here which to all intents and purposes are identical. Lets just look at that palette for a moment. We use the same colors on every project and literally none of these are in the 'basic colors' palette. I'm tempted to start recording how much time we spend putting in color definitions to define colors for color schemes, area schemes, filters etc. ![]()
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