Forum:Help changing the colour of an infobox?

Hi, I've just created an info box for Labyrinth, the most important topic on my wiki. I had to copy it from another site, and would really appreciate it if someone could change the colours of the infobox so they match the overall colour scheme. The background needs to be white, and the box with the film's title in needs to be a burgundy colour. Here's a link-

http://labyrinth.wikia.com/wiki/Labyrinth_(film)

Thank-you very much to anyone who can help :).

Nevia1991 11:36, December 4, 2011 (UTC)


 * You'll need to create your own template to use instead of Template:Infobox. Say, Template:Filmbox . Then set-up a table on the template page with the same parameters and just adjust the colours for each row and font. You can copy the template code from Infobox to get a head-start. --Crimsonphoenixca 13:50, December 4, 2011 (UTC)


 * The  in the current first line of c:labyrinth:Template:Infobox Film is what's making the background grey. You can replace the   (grey) with   (white) to make it white.
 * The  a few lines down is what's making the background of the title black. Replacing the   (black) with   (burgundy) will make it burgundy. -- Deltaneos (talk) 14:06, December 4, 2011 (UTC)


 * If you don't understand hex codes (#FFFFFF and so on) just type a color, it'll still work. 14:12, December 4, 2011 (UTC)
 * Ah, that did it - thank-you Deltaneos! Do you know where Ican find a list of all the diffierent codes? Nevia1991 14:16, December 4, 2011 (UTC)


 * I usually use List of colors, but it's very long, so it could take a while to load. 14:18, December 4, 2011 (UTC)
 * A Google search for "html color codes" will also grant a lot of results to choose from. 14:22, December 4, 2011 (UTC)
 * Or you can use a freeware image editing program, like GIMP, and use it's colour selection tool to get visual feedback on colours and their corresponding hex values. Hex values actually correspond directly to RGB values. The first two characters represent the red channel as a number from 0-255 in hexadecimal, the next two the green channel, and the last two the blue channel. Hex is easier to convert to a binary value, and I *think* that's why it found such common use early on. Modern browsers and the relative speed of modern computers makes this something of a moot point.
 * tl;dr: Grab GIMP, use the colour-picker. --Crimsonphoenixca 14:25, December 5, 2011 (UTC)