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Hi Walkerrmartin


Here is a more geeky answer.


In RGB space Photoshop often describes that pixel characteristics by Hue, Saturation, Luminosity (or loosely brightness)


Hue is the determined by the dominant or largest single value in RGB when the other two are equal and determined by the largest two numbers when they are all different  (If they all were the same it is a gray tone with no color).


So if you want every single pixel to have the same Hue, place a Layer above your image, fill it with any non gray color that has the desired hue (you can set the hue directly in the color picker) and then set the blend mode to Hue.   The Hue of the upper layer takes precedence while taking the Luminosity and Saturation of the lower Layer in that priority respectively.


In the image below, I created a rainbow gradient horzontally multiplied by a white to black gradient vertically to show a bunch of different colors.  In the lower half, the image is duplicated only with a Color Hue of 349 degrees using the technique above


Hope this is helpful


John Wheeler


[ATTACH]75370[/ATTACH]


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