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Why Your Headshot Edits Look Overdone (And the Exact Workflow That Fixed Mine)

Why Your Headshot Edits Look Overdone (And the Exact Workflow That Fixed Mine)

A client once told me my retouching looked “like a wax museum.” She wasn’t wrong. I still have that file saved in a folder called “Humbling Moments,” and I open it maybe once a year to remind myself what over-processing actually looks like when you’re too close to the screen to see it. Headshots are the trickiest category in portrait retouching, not because the techniques are complicated, but because the margin for error is almost zero.

Why I Stopped Duplicating Layers for Every Retouch (And What I Do Instead)

Why I Stopped Duplicating Layers for Every Retouch (And What I Do Instead)

Last month I was deep in a skin retouching pass for a haircare campaign, three hours in, when my client asked me to pull back the smoothing on the forehead “just a little.” Simple request. Except I’d been duplicating layers the way I always had, flattening as I went, and suddenly “just a little” meant either starting over or doing some very creative explaining. I’ve been retouching beauty work long enough to know better, and yet there I was, completely cornered by my own workflow.

How to Add Depth and Dimension to Flat-Looking Portrait Photos in Photoshop

How to Add Depth and Dimension to Flat-Looking Portrait Photos in Photoshop

A few weeks ago I was finishing up a batch of beauty edits for a skincare client and kept running into the same problem. The shots were technically clean, skin looked smooth, color was dialed in, but something was missing. Every image felt a little… flat. Like a drawing of a face rather than a face. I’d been so focused on removing imperfections that I’d accidentally ironed out the natural shadows and highlights that give skin its three-dimensional quality.

Why Dodge and Burn Is the Last Retouching Skill You'll Want to Learn (and the First You Should)

Why Dodge and Burn Is the Last Retouching Skill You'll Want to Learn (and the First You Should)

I still have the file. It lives in a folder I’ve never deleted, labeled “DO NOT SHOW ANYONE,” and every time I open Photoshop it’s sitting there, waiting. My first serious retouching attempt on a beauty portrait. The skin looks like it was painted with a foam roller. No dimension, no depth, no life. Just a flat, airbrushed approximation of a human face. What I was missing wasn’t a better plugin or a fancier frequency separation technique.

The 20-Minute Eye Enhancement Workflow That Makes Portraits Feel Alive

The 20-Minute Eye Enhancement Workflow That Makes Portraits Feel Alive

A few years back, a client emailed me after receiving her finished gallery. She loved everything, she said, except one thing: her eyes looked “like a doll’s.” Not a compliment. I went back to the file and stared at what I’d done. The whites were blown out to pure paper, the irises had been saturated to an almost cartoon blue, and the catch lights had been cloned into perfect symmetrical circles.

Frequency Separation Actually Explained: Why Your Skin Retouching Looks Fake (And How to Fix It)

Frequency Separation Actually Explained: Why Your Skin Retouching Looks Fake (And How to Fix It)

The first time a client told me my retouching looked “plastic,” I had no idea what she meant. I thought I’d done a beautiful job. The skin was smooth, the blemishes were gone, the whole image had this polished magazine quality I’d been chasing. She pulled up a reference image on her phone, slid it across the table, and said, “I want to look like that. Yours looks like a wax figure.

Portrait Cleanup Before You Touch the Skin: Why the Background Is Costing You More Time Than You Think

Portrait Cleanup Before You Touch the Skin: Why the Background Is Costing You More Time Than You Think

Last week I opened a portrait from a beauty brand shoot and spent forty minutes working on the model’s skin before I noticed it. A single strand of hair, ghosted across her left shoulder, catching the backlight in a way that made it look like a scar. I had to repaint half the shoulder. If I’d caught it in the first five minutes, it would have taken thirty seconds with the Clone Stamp.

Why Your Portraits Look Flat (And How Dodge and Burn Fixes It From the Inside Out)

Why Your Portraits Look Flat (And How Dodge and Burn Fixes It From the Inside Out)

A few years into my retouching career, I got a message from a client that I still think about. She’d sent her finished portraits to a makeup artist friend, who looked at them and said they looked “a little plastic.” Not bad, exactly. Just… off. Like the face had been buffed smooth and then lit from nowhere in particular. I knew exactly what had gone wrong. I’d been so focused on removing what I didn’t want that I’d forgotten to keep what made the face look real.

The 20-Minute Eye Enhancement Workflow That Stopped Making My Portraits Look Fake

The 20-Minute Eye Enhancement Workflow That Stopped Making My Portraits Look Fake

A few years into freelancing, I had a client sit across from me at a coffee shop, laptop open, and say the words every retoucher dreads: “She looks like a doll. Not in a good way.” The portrait was technically clean. Skin was smooth, the background was polished, the color grade was consistent. But the eyes, which I had spent probably forty minutes on, looked like they’d been swapped in from a video game character.

The Art of Subtle Makeup Retouching: Enhancing Beauty Without Overdoing It

The Art of Subtle Makeup Retouching: Enhancing Beauty Without Overdoing It

The Art of Subtle Makeup Retouching: Enhancing Beauty Without Overdoing It When I first started retouching portraits, I made the same mistake many editors do—I thought bigger edits meant better results. Over time, I learned that the most stunning makeup retouching is often the work people don’t notice. It’s about enhancement, not transformation. Let me share what I’ve discovered about creating makeup edits that feel authentic. Understanding Your Starting Point Before we touch a single slider, I always spend time studying the original image.

The Art of Subtle Beauty Editing: Enhancing Without Overdoing

The Art of Subtle Beauty Editing: Enhancing Without Overdoing

The Art of Subtle Beauty Editing: Enhancing Without Overdoing When I first started retouching portraits, I made a mistake I see many editors make: I assumed more editing meant better results. I’d smooth every pore, brighten every highlight, and blur away every hint of texture. The photos looked plasticky and lifeless—nothing like the confident, genuine people I’d photographed. Over the years, I’ve learned that the best beauty editing is the kind nobody notices.

The Art of Eye Enhancement: Making Eyes Pop in Portrait Retouching

The Art of Eye Enhancement: Making Eyes Pop in Portrait Retouching

The Art of Eye Enhancement: Making Eyes Pop in Portrait Retouching Eyes are the soul of a portrait. They’re often the first thing viewers connect with, and when we enhance them thoughtfully, we breathe life into our images. I’ve spent years perfecting eye enhancement techniques, and I’m excited to share the approach that’s transformed how I approach every portrait that comes across my desk. Why Eye Enhancement Matters Before we dive into the how, let’s talk about the why.

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