How to fill a shape with two colours using a sudden gradient change

Steve Rowland
SHARPN | Visual Comms
4 min readMar 4, 2021

Sometimes you’ll find yourself using a two-tone gradient fill to represent something that is in two states, or comes under two categories. For example, a programme issue that is amber, but turning green. Or a role on an org chart that is split across two workstreams.

The default with gradients is to create a graduated change. But that introduces a whole range of intermediate colours. Better and simpler is often a sudden change of colour:

This is exactly the same gradient tool in PowerPoint, but configured so the colour changes suddenly. It’s pretty straightforward:

  • Bring up the gradient fill pane. The least clicks is usually right click > Format shape > check gradient fill.
  • You only need two of the stops, so delete any others: select the stop and click the delete button with the red cross. (The number and position of the stops is usually set by the last gradient fill you did, so it’s unpredictable.)
  • Set the colour of each stop to the two colours you want.
  • Set the position of each stop to 50%. Or any other position, as long as you set them both the same.

Choose the Type and Direction until you have the effect you need.

Here’s an example:

Not just shape fill

This also works for table cells — so it can be used in risk and issue status, for example.

You can also apply it to outlines, text fill and even charts — but be careful how you use it, it could be easy to over-complicate your message.

Multiple colours

You can have more than two colours. You just need to add a new pair of stops for each colour change, and make sure each pair has an identical position.

Sometimes you might find that it doesn’t quite work at one of the colour changes — all you need to do is swap the colours of the two stops concerned. You’ll need to adjust the position of one stop so that you can see the other clearly, and then move it back to the right position after you’ve swapped the colours around.

Final note

Make sure that if you are using this effect, that it has a clear purpose. Don’t just apply it to make things look ‘pretty’.

Need more tips like this?

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Steve Rowland
SHARPN | Visual Comms

Visual comms expert | Crisp, clear documents for critical situations | Trainer & coach 🔗www.sharpn.co.uk 🔗learn.sharpn.co.uk