This tutorial mainly uses "Hue/Saturation" combined with "Blending Mode" and "Replace Color" to change the color of the character's shirt in the picture. It is very fast and practical.
Original picture
final renderings
1. Open a shirt picture and press Ctrl+J to copy one layer. This is a good habit. If something goes wrong, you can delete it directly without affecting the original image.
2. Use the magnetic lasso tool to outline the shirt. For drawings with such clear outlines, the Magnetic Lasso Tool is much easier to use than the Pen Tool. You can first outline the outline and then add or reduce details. When selecting, hold down the Shift key to increase the selection, and hold down the Alt key to decrease the selection. After selecting, press Ctrl+J to copy the shirt layer. Now we can start coloring.
3. Ctrl+U brings up the Hue/Saturation window, boldly drag the slider on the "Hue" bar, and observe the color changes. Some of the colors in between will be ugly, so we only choose those that look very natural. When the hue value is -180, the shirt turns yellow.
4. When the hue value is 35, the shirt turns purple.
5. When the hue value is 115, the shirt turns pink.
6. You can also adjust it through "Saturation". When the saturation value is -100, the shirt turns gray.
7. You can also adjust it through "Replace Color". Execute Menu/Image/Adjust/Replace Color, the mouse will change into a straw shape, click on the shirt, increase the tolerance, and drag the hue bar slider to adjust different colors. The difference between it and the previous adjustment method is that it adjusts a certain color. If it is a colorful floral shirt, it can only select one of the colors for adjustment.
8. In addition, we can also make adjustments through layer styles. When you change the blending mode of the shirt layer to Multiply, the shirt will turn dark blue.
9. When the blending mode is changed to "Screen", the shirt will turn white. Try other modes to get different results.
10. In addition to changing the color, we can also add patterns to the clothes through the "pattern filling" method. Change the blending mode of the shirt layer to "Soft Light", hold down the Ctrl key in the layer panel and click this layer to load its selection, execute menu/edit/fill, and select the following pattern to add patterns to the shirt. By filling different patterns, we can get different pattern effects. Isn’t it very convenient to change clothes like this?
11.The final effect is as follows: