Latest Articles

Beauty Dish vs. Umbrella: What Every Retoucher Needs to Understand About Studio Light Quality

Beauty Dish vs. Umbrella: What Every Retoucher Needs to Understand About Studio Light Quality

There’s a moment every retoucher knows well. You open a file, squint at the skin, and realize the problem isn’t texture or tone. It’s the light itself. Shadows landing in the wrong places, catchlights that look chaotic, a general scrappiness to the image that no frequency separation layer is going to fix. I spent years treating lighting as the photographer’s problem and post-processing as mine, and that division cost me hours of unnecessary work.

5 Lightroom & Camera Raw Masking Tricks That Will Change How You Work

5 Lightroom & Camera Raw Masking Tricks That Will Change How You Work

There’s a specific kind of frustration that comes from knowing a tool exists, using it every single day, and still feeling like you’re fighting it. For the longest time, that was me with Lightroom’s masking panel. I came to beauty retouching after years of wedding photography, and I built my masking habits fast and messy, learning just enough to get through a deadline. It wasn’t until I started slowing down and actually studying how other working photographers use these tools that things clicked into place.

Why Hair Retouching Breaks Most Editors (And the Layer Stack That Actually Fixes It)

Why Hair Retouching Breaks Most Editors (And the Layer Stack That Actually Fixes It)

Every few months I get a new client who sends me a photo where the hair is the whole problem. Not the skin, not the lighting. The hair. Maybe it’s a beauty shot where the model has gorgeous bone structure and the photographer nailed the exposure, but there’s a halo of flyaways catching the backlight like a fiber optic lamp. Or it’s a bridal portrait where the updo has three pieces escaping at the crown that somehow nobody caught before the shutter clicked.

Clean Skin, Real Texture: A Fashion Portrait Retouch Walkthrough Using Frequency Separation

Clean Skin, Real Texture: A Fashion Portrait Retouch Walkthrough Using Frequency Separation

There’s a specific kind of dread that comes with opening a fashion portrait where the skin is doing everything at once: uneven color patches on the forehead, texture that catches the light wrong, a general choppiness that no single tool seems to fix cleanly. Early in my retouching career, I kept reaching for the spot healing brush and hoping for the best. The results looked exactly like what they were: heavy-handed, plastic, and unconvincing.

Clean Skin, Fast: A Working Retoucher's Guide to Basic Portrait Cleanup in Photoshop

Clean Skin, Fast: A Working Retoucher's Guide to Basic Portrait Cleanup in Photoshop

There’s a version of me from about five years ago who would have spent forty-five minutes with the Healing Brush, sampling and resampling, zooming in to 300% to obsess over a single pore. The results were technically clean and somehow completely lifeless. It took a client politely describing my work as “a little plastic-looking” for me to finally step back and rethink my whole approach to basic cleanup. What I needed wasn’t a new technique so much as a smarter starting order and better tool choices.

How to Retouch Portrait Skin Without Making It Look Fake: A Frequency Separation Walkthrough

How to Retouch Portrait Skin Without Making It Look Fake: A Frequency Separation Walkthrough

There is a specific kind of dread that comes from opening a portrait file and realizing the skin needs work. Not dramatic work, just the quiet, tedious kind: uneven tone here, a stray hair there, texture that reads fine in person but turns into a problem under studio light. Early in my retouching career I used to bulldoze through those issues with heavy blurring and ended up with subjects who looked like they were made of latex.

The Uncanny Valley of Perfect: How to Train Your Eye to Spot AI-Generated Images

The Uncanny Valley of Perfect: How to Train Your Eye to Spot AI-Generated Images

There’s a skill I didn’t expect to need when I made the move from wedding photography into beauty retouching: learning to tell the difference between a photograph and a fabrication. Back when I started, the question was whether a retouch looked natural or “plastic.” Now the question has expanded. Clients send me reference images pulled from social media, mood boards assembled from Pinterest, and inspiration packs cobbled together from who-knows-where, and at least a few of those images in every batch are AI-generated, sometimes without the client even knowing.

Nail Skin Tones on the First Try: Using iPhone Photographic Styles with Your Clients

Nail Skin Tones on the First Try: Using iPhone Photographic Styles with Your Clients

One of the most exhausting parts of client work isn’t the shoot itself. It’s the revision spiral. You deliver a gallery, the client says something feels “off” about the color, and suddenly you’re on round three trying to decode feedback like “can you make it warmer but not too orange?” I spent years treating this as a communication problem. Turns out, a big chunk of it is actually a workflow problem, and your iPhone’s built-in editing tools might already have a fix.

Retouch It or Reshoot It? How Smart Photographers Decide (And Why Tethering Changes Everything)

Retouch It or Reshoot It? How Smart Photographers Decide (And Why Tethering Changes Everything)

There’s a decision every retoucher and photographer eventually faces, usually at the worst possible moment: something went wrong on set, and now you’re staring at an image that needs either a serious fix in post or a full reshoot. Neither option feels great. One costs time at the computer. The other costs money, coordination, and maybe a little pride. In this Daniel Norton Photographer tutorial, Daniel walks through exactly that scenario, using a real example from a recent commercial shoot where headphones ended up on the model backwards.

Frequency Separation: The Technique That Saved My Retouching (And How to Actually Use It)

Frequency Separation: The Technique That Saved My Retouching (And How to Actually Use It)

A few years into my retouching work, a beauty client sent back a batch of images with three words in the subject line: “too plastic, sorry.” No further notes. Just that, and a request to redo the whole set. I had been smoothing skin the way I learned from YouTube tutorials, painting directly on a softened duplicate layer and calling it done. The edits looked fine to me on screen at 50%.

How I Watch a Headshot Retouching Timelapse and Actually Learn From It

How I Watch a Headshot Retouching Timelapse and Actually Learn From It

There is a particular kind of client who emails you the morning after delivery to say the portraits look “a little overdone.” I got that email early in my retouching career, and it stung more than I want to admit. The problem was not that I was working too hard on the skin. The problem was that I had no real workflow. I was just pushing sliders around until something looked smooth, and smooth is not the same as natural.

What Woodland Photography Taught Me About Seeing Light Differently (Nigel Danson Breakdown)

What Woodland Photography Taught Me About Seeing Light Differently (Nigel Danson Breakdown)

I came to landscape photography the same way I came to most things outside my retouching work: sideways, by accident, and slightly obsessed. After years of staring at skin texture and catchlights on a monitor, I started taking long walks with a camera just to remember what it felt like to photograph something that couldn’t ask for a revision. That’s how I stumbled onto Nigel Danson’s work, and specifically this tutorial on woodland photography that stopped me mid-scroll and made me watch it twice.

Never Miss a Tutorial

Join our newsletter for weekly retouching tips, tutorials, and exclusive content.

Subscribe Now