’Folder Color’ Tool Adds Support for Ubuntu 22.10 (UPDATED)
You’re probably already familiar with Folder Color, a terrifically nifty tool that makes it easy to change the colour of folder icons in Nautilus.
Well, I’ve some good news: it recently added support for Ubuntu 22.10 and GNOME 43. This means you can continue to change the colour of any folder in Nautilus (as well as badge folders with a selection of emblems) to suit your own tastes.
If you’ve used the tool in earlier versions of Ubuntu/Nautilus then nothing has changed: right-click on any folder in the file manager and page into the ‘folder color’ menu to pick a hue from the list available. The change applies instantly.
UPDATE
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Boost Your Productivity with Folder Color App in Ubuntu
Want to go beyond the default folder look, themes and emblems in Ubuntu? Try folder color.
The popular folder color application now supports the modern GNOME 43 and its file manager, Files 43. The recent change brings the color options right inside the context menu of Files 43 with the GTK4 context menu.
Colourizing your folders sometimes benefits when you work with a huge list of directories in Linux. This decade-old application makes it easy for you. In addition, it supports all the major distribution file managers.
The application currently supports GNOME file manager – Files, Linux Mint’s file manager Nemo and Ubuntu MATE’s file manager Caja.
Although GNOME already supports emblems in its latest iteration, those emblems can also be set using folder color’s new context menu.