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Linking your Master Palettes
Since Toon Boom Digital Pro is a stand-alone application, every scene is local to the machine. This means that all of the scene’s data is only accessible from that particular scene. Palettes are also local to the scene: they can be shared between all elements (layers), but not between scenes. However, some users may want to share their palette across a whole project. Digital Pro offers that possibility. There are two levels of sharing available:
By default, all palettes are local to the scene. This is a completely safe method and it avoids any palette loss. Full Link sharing implies that all the scenes are linked to a single palette master directory. Although this method is a useful and quick way of updating all the colours throughout the whole project, if the directory is moved, the link to the original palettes can be broken. The Clone method avoids this and updates the colours in the project. This method takes identical copies of the master palettes and uses these clones in the scenes. This is a safer but longer procedure than using the Full Link method. Full LinkBy default, a palette is an independent file stored in your Toon Boom Digital Pro scene. This file can be copied, moved or deleted. To fully link a palette throughout an entire project, you need to create a central directory where you can copy all of the palettes you have created. Every time you link a palette in an element, it is linked to this folder. If you modify the palette, it will be updated throughout the whole project. ![]() ![]() If you move the scenes or the palette’s master directory to another location, the link between the two will be broken. Toon Boom Digital Pro has some features which are used to avoid a complete colour and palette loss. These will be explained later in this section. To link your master palette:
![]() To link an element (such as a colour model) to the palette that is stored in the external Palette directory, you must remove the original palette from the element’s palette list. You will then load the duplicated palette into the master palette directory by dragging it from the Template Library, like you did for the other elements. Recovering Broken Links:When a palette is linked to a scene, Digital Pro creates a backup palette in case the link is broken. This backup can be found in the scene where the external palette was imported. Digital Pro creates a folder called BKExternal-palette and stores a clone of the palette in it. It also creates an XML file containing the original link to the master palette. ![]() If the scene or the master palette directory is moved and the link is lost, Digital Pro will display a warning message next time the scene is opened. ![]() Until the path is updated in the XML file or the master palette directory or the scene is restored to its original position, the scene will use the backup palette. ![]() When the link is restored, the scene will automatically use the original master palette when you reopen the scene. Clone LinkThe Clone Palette method is a solution that falls in between the local palettes and the fully linked palettes. The Clone palette is cloned from the master palette. It contains the same values, colour names and colour identification numbers as the master. You can modify the colour values and names, but the colour number identification will remain the same. It allows you to modify the colours in one palette independently from the other. ![]() This clone principle can be used to create a new palette style, such as a night style. Instead of repainting the character with a new palette for a scene that takes place during the night, you can simply load the clone night palette. This can also be used to keep track of a character’s palette across the scenes. By cloning the master palette in the element, you keep your palette local, but the clone keeps the same properties as the master. If a colour is changed in the master palette during the production, you can reload the master palette in your scene to update all of the colours to the new style. This technique is a bit more tedious but is safer than the full link technique. ![]() Refer to the Toon Boom Digital Pro Basic Concepts chapter in the Introduction and Basics Guide to learn about Clone palettes and how to create them. To share your palettes through clones:
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