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Your First Unreal Engine 5 Project: A Beginner's Complete Guide to 3D Scene Creation

When I first approached Unreal Engine 5, I felt overwhelmed by the interface and endless possibilities. But in this excellent tutorial, Serge Ramelli shows us that creating professional 3D scenes isn’t as intimidating as it seems. His beginner-friendly breakdown walks you through everything from installation to final render in under an hour. Let me break down this comprehensive guide so you can follow along confidently. Getting Started: Installation and Setup The foundation of any UE5 project begins with proper installation.

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The Secret to Professional Headshot Retouching

Corporate headshots are the bread and butter of portrait retouching. They’re not as glamorous as beauty or fashion work, but they pay the bills — and there’s a real art to doing them well. The goal with a corporate headshot is simple: make the person look like the best version of themselves on their best day. Not younger, not thinner, not different — just polished. What to Fix Temporary blemishes (always remove) Stray hairs (clean up the silhouette) Uneven skin tone (especially redness on nose, cheeks) Wrinkled clothing (quick fix with Liquify) Distracting background elements Under-eye circles (reduce, don’t eliminate) Shine on forehead and nose (reduce, keep some for dimension) What to Leave Alone Wrinkles (reduce by 20-30%, never remove) Moles and beauty marks (these are features, not flaws) Facial structure (no Liquify reshaping on headshots) Smile lines (they make people look friendly and genuine) The reason is practical: this person’s colleagues will see this photo.

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Understanding Curves for Portrait Retouching

The Curves adjustment is the single most powerful tool in Photoshop. Every retoucher needs to understand it deeply — not just “S-curve for contrast” but the full range of what it can do. Curves Basics: What’s Actually Happening The Curves dialog shows a graph where the X-axis is input values (how bright pixels are now) and the Y-axis is output values (how bright you want them to be). A straight diagonal line means no change — every input maps to the same output.

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The Ethics of Retouching: Where to Draw the Line

Every retoucher eventually faces a request that makes them uncomfortable. A client asks you to make someone look twenty pounds thinner. A brand wants a model’s skin to look literally poreless. A parent asks you to slim down their teenager in a family photo. These aren’t hypotheticals. They’ve all happened to me, and they’ll happen to you. Having a framework for thinking about these decisions before you’re in the moment is essential.

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The Essential Guide to Color Correction in Portrait Retouching

The Essential Guide to Color Correction in Portrait Retouching When I first started retouching portraits, I noticed that even the most beautifully lit photographs could fall flat without proper color correction. A client would look at their edited image and say, “Something feels off,” even though the skin looked smooth and the composition was perfect. That something was usually color. Color correction is the foundation of professional portrait retouching. It’s what transforms a decent photo into one that feels alive, balanced, and genuinely flattering.

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The Best Photoshop Brushes for Portrait Retouching

You don’t need hundreds of brushes for portrait retouching. You need about five, configured correctly. Most professional retouchers use a surprisingly small set of brushes and rely on pressure sensitivity and blend modes to get different effects. Here’s my working brush kit and how I use each one. 1. The Soft Round Brush (Your Workhorse) This is Photoshop’s default round brush with hardness set to 0%. You’ll use this for 70% of your retouching work.

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The Art of Portrait Cleanup: A Step-by-Step Guide to Natural-Looking Retouching

The Art of Portrait Cleanup: A Step-by-Step Guide to Natural-Looking Retouching When I first started retouching portraits, I made the same mistake many of us do: I cleaned up everything. Every texture, every subtle shadow, every whisper of character. The result? Portraits that looked plastic and lifeless. Over the years, I’ve learned that great portrait cleanup isn’t about erasing reality—it’s about enhancing it thoughtfully. Today, I’m sharing the approach we use in our studio to create portraits that look professionally polished while still feeling authentically human.

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The Art of Skin Retouching: A Beginner-Friendly Guide to Natural Results

The Art of Skin Retouching: A Beginner-Friendly Guide to Natural Results When I first started retouching portraits, I made the same mistake many of us do: I over-smoothed everything. The result? Beautiful skin that looked like porcelain—and completely artificial. Over the years, I’ve learned that the best skin retouching is the kind people don’t notice. It’s about enhancement, not transformation. Today, I want to share what I’ve discovered about creating skin that looks naturally flawless.

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The Art of Natural Skin Retouching: My Step-by-Step Approach

The Art of Natural Skin Retouching: My Step-by-Step Approach When I first started portrait retouching, I made the same mistake many beginners do—I over-smoothed everything until my clients looked like porcelain dolls. After years of refining my craft, I’ve learned that the best retouching is the kind people can’t quite see. We’re aiming for enhancement, not transformation. In this article, I’ll walk you through my exact workflow for achieving skin that looks naturally flawless.

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The Art of Natural Skin Retouching: A Step-by-Step Guide

The Art of Natural Skin Retouching: A Step-by-Step Guide When I first started retouching portraits, I made the same mistake many beginners do: I smoothed skin until it looked plastic. The turning point came when a mentor told me, “Your job isn’t to erase the person—it’s to reveal their best self.” That philosophy changed everything about how I approach skin retouching. Today, I want to share the techniques that transformed my work and can transform yours too.

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The Art of Natural Makeup Retouching: Enhancing Beauty Without Looking Edited

The Art of Natural Makeup Retouching: Enhancing Beauty Without Looking Edited When I first started retouching portraits, I made a common mistake—I over-edited the makeup. My clients looked airbrushed and plastic, which wasn’t what they wanted at all. I’ve since learned that the best makeup retouching is invisible. It enhances what’s already there while keeping skin looking human and real. Let me walk you through my approach. Understanding the Goal Before we touch a single brush, I ask myself: are we enhancing existing makeup, or creating a polished version of the client’s natural face?

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Speed Retouching: Professional Results in Under 5 Minutes

Not every portrait gets 90 minutes of retouching. Event photographers might deliver 200 images from a single shoot. Corporate headshot sessions might produce 30 portraits in an afternoon. You need a fast workflow that still looks professional. Here’s my 5-minute retouching process, broken into steps that I time myself on. Minute 1: Healing Pass Open the image and immediately create a new blank layer. Select the Healing Brush, set to “Sample All Layers,” and quickly remove:

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