Touch up your coloring pages
Touch up your coloring pages
There's always that one stray dot on an otherwise perfect page. Or a line that stops half an inch short. Touch up is the brush tool for those fixes. Draw in black, erase in white, save. No AI, no credits, no queue.
What it does
Touch up lives in the edit panel under Cleanup. Draw adds black strokes on top of your page. Erase paints white over marks you want gone.
When you click Save (free), ColorBliss composites your strokes onto the original image at full print resolution and adds a new page to your library. The original stays put.
How to use it
- Open any coloring page from your dashboard, folders, or gallery
- Click Edit
- Select Touch up in the sidebar under Cleanup
- Pick Draw or Erase, set brush width with the slider (2 to 40 px), and work on the canvas
- Use Undo, Redo, or Reset if you need to back up
- Click Save (free)
If you see Save to folder, you can send the new version straight into a folder instead of your main dashboard.
Where it works
Anywhere you can open the edit panel. Dashboard, folders, or on a page you already edited or upscaled.
Touch up costs zero credits. Free accounts get it, same as Adjustments and Text overlay.
Common patterns
Most of the time I reach for touch up right before printing. One mark, one short line, thirty seconds.
Smudge on white paper? Erase, narrow brush, paint white over it, save.
Line that stopped short? Draw, match the brush width to the lines around it, fill the gap, save.
Page needs broader cleanup first? Run Remove background or Adjustments, then come back for the small stuff.
Not sure if you need AI? Try touch up on a dot or a short line before you spend credits on inpainting.
What it doesn't do
It won't regenerate artwork. Black and white paint only.
Erase doesn't cut to transparency. It covers pixels with white. Great on white backgrounds. On photo pages with gray fills, you may see white blobs. Inpainting handles that better.
It always saves a new page. Your original doesn't change.
Switch to another edit tool without saving and your strokes disappear. Same behavior as inpainting. Save first if you want to keep the work.
Big rewrites still belong in inpainting or prompt-based editing. Touch up is for small hand fixes.
Tips
The canvas shrinks large pages so they're easier to work on. The saved file still uses the image's full dimensions. What you fix is what prints.
Undo and redo work across draw and erase. You can switch modes and still step back.
Zoom your browser if you need a closer look. Match brush width to the line art around the spot you're fixing.
Getting help
Email help@colorbliss.com if something's off. Send the page title or a screenshot, whether you were in Draw or Erase, what you expected, and whether it broke while drawing or on save.
Next steps
Open a page with one annoying flaw and fix it. If you need AI to rebuild a whole section, switch to Inpainting in the same edit panel.

