I would like to see a better way of automatically sorting the colours in my palettes.

The way it is now, if I sort with "hue", then brightness isn't taken into account. So I get a spectrum of colours that are very nicely ordered in terms of colour, but they are interspersed with fairly neutral dark colours.

If I sort with brightness, hue is not taken into account. So I get a spectrum of colours that are all over the place, going from dark to light. Not much help at all unless I am colour blind.

If I sort with saturation, I still get a spectrum of colours that are all over the place, going from pale to vibrant. Still not much help.

If I sort with HSB, it's actually produces the exact same result as sorting by hue alone.

So I would like to see a true HSB sorting.
Also, I would like to be able to have the sorting apply to only a part of the colour palette. So for example to sort just the colours I have selected. This would make it easier to sort the greyscale bits of the palette. Or the most recently added colours.

I find that apart from adding 1,2 or 3 colours, I won't add to my colour palette for months, and then I'll realise a part of my colour palette is neglected (orange say, or steely blue colours, or browns) So I get in there and add about 12, 24 or 36 colours while I am there anyway. It's really great that I can add this many colours at a time! But trying to sort those with my existing palette is a bit of a nightmare.

Because the other problem is that in the palette editor, I can't seem to select 8 colours from the current palette and move them all in one go. Do I really have to move them all one at a time? That is getting a bit tedious. Especially when I know I'm going to have to make a separate CMYK palette and do this all over again...

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  • Hi Leslie,
    I'm not sure that I understand what you are looking for.
    However, colors have been organized in 3 dimensional spaces -- be it HSB, Lab, RGB, CMY, Munsell, etc.
    If you want a palette shown as a row or column, you must describe a path in some way through one of these spaces. You have identified paths in hue, brightness, or saturation in HSB. A path is one dimensional. You can have a two dimensional palette such as the one frequently displayed for HSB. Hue is circular and distance from the center is saturation. It's a plane in HSB space. You can have a plane through the HSB sphere such as shown in the Munsell charts showing rows and columns for a particular hue.

    I don't believe that you can construct a three dimensional palette on a flat surface such as a monitor.

    Further, there are palettes which reflect mood -- autumn colors, cool colors, colors which harmonize, colors which please, etc. (I like a blue-orange combination.) I doubt that these can be found by an automatic system since they depend on human emotion.

    I wonder how you chose palettes by hue, brightness, and saturation. Did you pick them out from a book of color charts, such as the one by Munsell.

    I would have to resort to mathematics to do that. I would have to write an equation with three variables to describe the path that I wanted in a chosen space. Then pick a sequence of points and plug them in one at a time in some color picker.

    How did you do it. You can help me more than I can help you.
    Phil
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