Setting colors in objects arranged using a pattern brush
[I want to attach the file so you can see directly what I'm working with, but this page keeps giving me an error message saying The attachment's suncatcher 2 - 12.5x4.5 21 hangers 4 supports.ai content type (application/postscript) does not match its file extension and has been removed." I don't know how to fix that; I've carefully checked that I am uploading the right file.]
The attached .ai file gets used in a woodworking CNC setup (Shaper Origin, for those who might be familiar with it) to show the system where and how to cut. The colors have meaning to the CNC, so it's nice to be able to preset them.
The project is a boomerang-shaped piece of wood with various holes drilled through it that a friend of mine, who is a beading enthusiast, uses to create suncatchers made of beads hung on strings that are suspended from the holes in the hanger. Each hanger gets up to 17 small holes for the beads a 4 larger holes for the support wires. When she doesn't want all 17 holes, I just don't drill all of them.
So that's the background.
I createed the 21 small holes by using a pattern brush that arranged the dots that represent the holes along a pre-drawn arc. Unfortunately I didn't save a link to the tutorial I followed, so I don't know now exactly what I did.
Anyway, when I try to select dots or any one dot to set the colors, the selection lights up all the holes and the path at once. The color indicators in the toolbar become question marks. Then I try to set the colors by double-clicking the color indicators in the tool bar as I usually would; the color picker opens as usual, but whatever selection I make doesn't get set in the object.
So I would like to understand what's going on with selecting and the color setting process in this file. My goal is to be able to arrange objects along paths and set their colors via a repeatable workflow that I understand. As I'm sure is completely obvious, I don't yet know much at all about Illustrator, so explanations in baby-talk are entirely appropriate!
