Hey, in this video we're going to look at kind of pulling colors from existing branded logos to use within your UI design. Okay? Let's say that we're doing some work for a company and you have their logo, okay? You can bring it in. Um, we are gonna go file place and in this example we're just gonna use the Google, uh, logo png, bring 'em in, okay? And let's say I want to draw some elements.
Say it's our hero box in the background here, okay? But I want to match the Google colors. Okay? Let's pretend it's some random color to start with. Not random enough, okay? With it selected, okay?
What you need to do is grab the eyedropper tool, okay? The eyedropper tool's kind of hiding down here. And all you need to do is with anything selected, just pick a color from it, okay? And you can see it'll start pulling the brand colors from that, how accurate it'll be pretty accurate, okay? And, um, let's say you want to kind of add them, but to use later, rather than having to use the eyedropper tool every time, what you're gonna do is switch to your swatches panel. Now your swatches panel, if you can't find it, it's under window down to swatches.
Okay? Turn it on. And think of swatches as pre-made pre-mixed colors ready to use. So what we are gonna do is with, let's break this blue. Okay? So that, here he is there.
What you can do is up the top here, okay? Drop down. And there's an option that says New swatch. Okay? Give it a name. I'm gonna call mine Google Blue.
Google Blue, okay. And click, you can see it's both in my library. Okay? And it's down here in my swatches library. Okay? So, um, just work your way through the colors.
Uh, grab the eyedropper tool. Red one here, new Google Red. There he is there and he's down here in your swatches panel. The reason it's kind of good to have them in your swatches, we will find it a little bit later on. You'll find that this library thing here is awesome. For most things.
It's new and it's not perfect for everything yet. So sometimes you need them in your swatches panel as well. Okay? Awesome. That's how to pull brand colors from existing logos to start using, rather going off and trying to figure out what all those colors are. Okay, there you go.