answered
2015-04-04 15:38:08 +0200
I don't see why not. Ambience is made up of four elements in the UI.
PRIMARY - affects Time, App Names in Launcher, text in app cover windows, unselected text areas such as Recipient in SMS, letters/numbers on keyboard, trailing dots, contacts names in people,......
HIGHLIGHT - affects operator/date/year, pulley menu/overlay/unselected TEXT, app title text in app window, time in clock app, selected alarm, shutter/tools/tools overlay in camera app,.....
SECONDARY - affects 'Hi'/recipient/send in SMS, time of text in SMS inbox, directory/owner permissions/date created in File Browser, user created name for Timer in clock app,.....
SECONDARY HIGHLIGHT - onpressed text /recipient/Hi/text to inbox time in SMS inbox/main window, onpressed text artist name in Mediaplayer Albums window,
Now, once you know which elements you want to change, you can either go the long winded route and make your own ambience from scratch (http://talk.maemo.org/showthread.php?t=92963) or simply use Terminal to make changes on the fly.
The commands for doing just that, are as follows; (change the 6 digit hex codes to get your desired colour, you could use http://www.color-hex.com/ as reference, to get exactly the colour you want);
dconf write /desktop/jolla/theme/color/primary "'#00ee1c'"
(see Primary notes)
dconf write /desktop/jolla/theme/color/secondary "'#00ee1c'"
(see Secondary notes)
dconf write /desktop/jolla/theme/color/highlight "'#00ee1c'"
(see Highlight notes)
dconf write /desktop/jolla/theme/color/secondaryHighlight "'#00770e'"
(see secondaryHighlight notes)
I have made one or two ambiences where the text colour has been changed throughout the UI (except system icons), here's an example, an ambience I created called Ambience P1
(found on Openrepos);
(The text colour is actually light green, although it looks yellow)
Hope this helps,
Regards,