It depends what you mean. > I need to modify a picture with pink color. or more naturally, > I need to modify a picture with pink. > > I need to modify a picture with the color pink. This sentence could be interpreted as saying you need to modify a picture by adding the color pink, either to change an existing color to pink or to mix it with pink (e.g. a black-and-white version of the Komen Foundation logo). It could also be interpreted as saying you need to modify in some unspecified way a picture which already contains the color pink (e.g. a picture of a carnation). >I need to modify a picture using pink color. i.e. >I need to modify a picture using pink. > >I need to modify a picture using the color pink. This sentence explicitly says you will apply the color pink to the picture, but I don't think sounds as natural as using "with." The last example, >I need to modify a picture by pink color. is not typically used in English.