

To make this percentage smaller, drag your finger to the left. To make this percentage bigger, drag your finger to the right. I prefer to have my ColorDrop threshold at about 92%. If you do that, it’ll just fill your whole canvas. For the ColorDrop threshold, I’ve found the bigger the better, as long as you don’t go past 99%. The smaller the percentage, the more likely you’ll have a white line on the outline of your ColorDrop. You should also see a blue line that represents the threshold percentage.

You should see a thin, grey line that says “ColorDrop threshold” and then a percentage. Look above the canvas, under the grey bar where the tools are. Hold the color until it automatically ColorDrops, but don’t let go. First, create an enclosed shape to ColorDrop into. The question now is, how do you change the threshold? It’s a little bit tricky, but l’ll show you step by step. If you have the threshold too high, ColorDrop will just ignore the boundaries. If you have the threshold too low, you’ll get a white line between the ColorDrop and the outline. The threshold is how finicky ColorDrop will be about coloring around the boundaries. The good news is there’s a simple way to fix this.įirst of all, why does this happen? This has to do with ColorDrop’s threshold. Most people accidentally ruin this feature, so that when they use ColorDrop they get a nasty, white line around the edge of their outline, or the ColorDrop fills the entire page! If this has happened to you, don’t worry, because this seems to be a common problem! There are plenty of long-time procreate users that have this problem.

You’ve probably heard of ColorDrop, which allows you to add color to an enclosed shape simply by dragging the color to the shape.
