For the white spots, are you using Microsoft Paint? Because if you are stop using Microsoft Paint. It doesn't support transparency, so it'll fill your transparent parts with white. Instead, Paint.net, GIMP, and Krita are all freeware. If you're doing pixel art, I recommend starting with Paint.net as it's the easiest to learn.
For the green tint on the leaves, Minecraft does that automatically. While the oak's color overlay is controlled by foliage.png, the birch leaves' color is hard-coded into the game. It can't be altered just by changing the color of the texture. You either need to remove the tintindex from the model (which is pretty advanced if you're just starting out) or else use Optifine to give the birch leaves a unique colormap. This is slightly less advanced, but you still need to know how folder structure and the like work.
So, I'm (obviously) making a texture pack, and I'm having lots of problems with the leaves.
some Examples: (photos in attachments)
Oak: Is light blue like it's meant to be, but is filled in with white for some reason. And the leaves block for it is Green....
Birch: Meant to be Light pink, but is a weird meaty colour. Filled in with green.
Sorry if you can't see the blocks for it well, I put it on the trees so u could see it, probably not the best but i tried.
can someone tell me how to fix this? thank you.
if you need more details, ask.
HI
For the white spots, are you using Microsoft Paint? Because if you are stop using Microsoft Paint. It doesn't support transparency, so it'll fill your transparent parts with white. Instead, Paint.net, GIMP, and Krita are all freeware. If you're doing pixel art, I recommend starting with Paint.net as it's the easiest to learn.
For the green tint on the leaves, Minecraft does that automatically. While the oak's color overlay is controlled by foliage.png, the birch leaves' color is hard-coded into the game. It can't be altered just by changing the color of the texture. You either need to remove the tintindex from the model (which is pretty advanced if you're just starting out) or else use Optifine to give the birch leaves a unique colormap. This is slightly less advanced, but you still need to know how folder structure and the like work.
I hope that helps you.