Color
dynamics determine how the color of paint changes over the course
of a stroke.

Brush strokes without color dynamics (left) and with color
dynamics (right)
- Foreground/Background
Jitter and Control
-
Specifies how
paint varies between the foreground color and background color.
To
specify a percentage by which the color of the paint can vary, type
a number, or use the slider to enter a value. To specify how you
want to control the color variance of brush marks, choose an option
from the Control pop‑up menu:
- Off
-
Specifies no control over the color variance of brush marks.
- Fade
-
Varies the color of paint between the foreground color and
the background color in the specified number of steps.
- Pen Pressure, Pen Tilt, Stylus Wheel, Rotation
-
Varies the color of paint between the foreground color and
the background color based on the pen pressure, pen tilt, position
of the pen thumbwheel, or rotation of the pen.
- Hue Jitter
-
Specifies a percentage by which the hue of the paint can
vary in a stroke. Type a number, or use the slider to enter a value.
A lower value changes the hue while maintaining a close proximity
to the hue of the foreground color. A higher value increases the
difference between hues.
- Saturation Jitter
-
Specifies a percentage by which the saturation of the paint can
vary in a stroke. Type a number, or use the slider to enter a value.
A lower value changes the saturation while maintaining a close proximity
to the saturation of the foreground color. A higher value increases
the difference between saturation levels.
- Brightness Jitter
-
Specifies a percentage by which the brightness of the paint can
vary in a stroke. Type a number, or use the slider to enter a value.
A lower value changes the brightness while maintaining a close proximity
to the brightness of the foreground color. A higher value increases
the difference between brightness levels.
- Purity
-
Increases or decreases the saturation of the color. Type
a number, or use the slider to enter a percentage between –100 and
100. At –100%, the color is fully desaturated; at 100%, the color
is fully saturated.