Touching Up
Four specialty apps that will make your portraits impress
Retouching a portrait usually takes several steps in Photoshop to make a well-exposed image effectively stand out. Pros use techniques like cloning, burning and dodging; various filters; and localized color enhancements with layer masks to get a stunning portrait. It’s a fine art that takes a lot of practice. Luckily for those who want great results without the learning curve, these applications will give your portraits a professional look quickly and easily. And when you need to do some elaborate masking, we’ve got a plug-in for that, too.Alien Skin Image Doctor 2
Alien Skin’s Image Doctor 2 features tools to help you restore old photos, re-touch portraits, and remove any unwanted objects from your images.
To use the plug-in’s Skin Softener effect to remove skin blemishes, you’ll first make a selection using the various selection tools in Photoshop (see sidebar) to constrain the filter’s effects to the problem areas. The interface provides two different slider controls: Contract/Expand Selection to increase or decrease your selection; and Soften Amount to control the intensity of the softening effect, which eliminates blemishes in your selected areas. Another tool in the Image Doctor’s bag, Smart Fill, helps you remove unwanted objects by replacing pixels in your selected area with pixels sampled from the surrounding areas, or a specific area of your choosing—great for removing litter from a street scene, for example. The Image Doctor 2 plug-in is available for both Mac and Windows. List Price: $199.
Imagenomic Portraiture 2Portraiture 2 is a powerful masking tool that helps you refine your images to get rid of unwanted blemishes and to smooth details. It features a Skin Tones Mask tool that lets you apply Auto-Mask for automatic correction, but also gives you manual control through sliders with fine control over colors, opacity, feathering and luminance.
The Detail Smoothing tool offers separate slider controls for large, medium and small areas of contrast, making it easy to apply different levels of smoothing for different types of details. Use this tool to remove blemishes while preserving details like hair, eyebrows and eyelashes, for example. It also dynamically adjusts the amount of the effect based on the size of your image. The Enhancements controls allow you to enhance your portrait’s sharpness, warmth, brightness and contrast without blowing highlights or muddying the shadows. The Warmth slider is particu-larly helpful for subtle en-hancements to the color tone of your subject’s skin.
You can use Portraiture 2 in a batch process to apply the same corrections to an entire set of images automatically. Portraiture 2 is available for Photoshop (Windows and Mac); there’s also a version for Apple Aperture, which is in beta at the time of this writing. List Price: $199.
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faisal makes this comment
Saturday, 02 May 2009
soft ware
dear,sir,i like ,photo editing.i used photo shop 08,auto finishing pro,to send me alatest software.kindly,faisal,from pakistanAlyssa Coney makes this comment
Sunday, 26 July 2009
Bina makes this comment
Monday, 10 August 2009
Imagenomic Portraiture 2
i use Imagenomic Portraiture 2 for some of my work but the only down side to it is does not work great with every photo. Photos with a high noise may not always come out so great. For most it enhances color and skin tones ,contrast, and saturation.md arshad makes this comment
Friday, 21 August 2009
asha
joy kasba himd arshad makes this comment
Friday, 21 August 2009
joy
dear,sir,i like ,photo editing.i used photo shop 08,auto finishing pro,to send me alatest software.kindly,faisal,from pakistanHarley Davis makes this comment
Saturday, 14 November 2009
portraiture 2
When you have a high noise portrait image, your best bet is to remove some noise (photoshop style) by copying a background layer, and using you favorite noise reduction process. Photoshop has it's own engine, but I prefer to use different plug ins for different situations. For low light images, you may want to add brightness, or simply attempt to remove color noise. Luminance noise is still a good thing, because it keeps your colors from seeming lifeless. Next, use a portrait enhancer on a new "selection" style layer where you've selected only those portions of your model that you want to correct (skin, face, etc). This way, you maintain luminosity, color, and style without the pixelation and noise. Object colors remain solid, while your model is corrected or retouched to perfection. I like NIK software for noise removal, and imagenomic for portrait correction.