Latest Articles

AI-Powered Portrait Retouching: Using Liquify, Neural Filters, and the Happiness Slider You Didn't Know Existed

AI-Powered Portrait Retouching: Using Liquify, Neural Filters, and the Happiness Slider You Didn't Know Existed

There’s a specific kind of client portrait that every retoucher knows: the one where the subject looks technically fine but somehow unhappy, closed-off, a little flat. You’ve balanced the skin, the light is clean, and yet something about the expression makes the whole image feel heavy. For years, my only options were to either live with it or spend forty minutes carefully painting in a subtler version of whatever the subject’s face was doing.

What Landscape Photographers Know About Light That Every Beauty Retoucher Should Steal

What Landscape Photographers Know About Light That Every Beauty Retoucher Should Steal

There’s a reason I keep a folder on my desktop called “Not Beauty.” It’s full of tutorials from photographers who have nothing to do with my usual world of skin smoothing and color grading, and it’s one of the most useful folders I have. When I burned out on wedding photography years ago and moved into beauty retouching, I thought I was leaving landscape and nature work behind entirely. What I didn’t expect was how much the discipline of outdoor photographers would reshape the way I think about light, patience, and the decision-making that happens before you ever open Lightroom.

Why Hair Retouching Breaks Most Retouchers (And the Workflow That Finally Fixed It)

Why Hair Retouching Breaks Most Retouchers (And the Workflow That Finally Fixed It)

The first time a client pushed back on my hair retouching, I was three years into freelancing and thought I was doing pretty well. She sent me a screenshot with a red circle around the subject’s hairline and the words: “It looks like she’s wearing a helmet.” She was right. I had smoothed the flyaways so aggressively and cloned the scalp so carelessly that the entire silhouette looked vacuum-sealed. The hair had lost every quality that makes hair look like hair: variation, transparency, the way individual strands catch light differently from one another.

From Flat to Striking: A Retoucher's Guide to Making Bottle Photos Pop

From Flat to Striking: A Retoucher's Guide to Making Bottle Photos Pop

There’s a category of product photo that arrives in my inbox looking almost great. Not broken, not hopeless. Just… flat. The light is decent, the composition is solid, but something about it sits on the screen like a damp cloth. Early in my freelance career, I’d hand those images back with heavy-handed contrast pumped across the whole frame and call it done. Clients were polite about it. They weren’t thrilled. It took a while to understand that “making it pop” is actually a layered, surgical process, not a single slider move.

Shooting for the Composite: What a Halloween Zombie Setup Taught Me About Commercial Lighting

Shooting for the Composite: What a Halloween Zombie Setup Taught Me About Commercial Lighting

Every few years, a tutorial stops me mid-green-tea and makes me rethink something I thought I already understood. I was prepping for a beauty retouching workshop when I pulled up Watch the full tutorial on YouTube — a CreativeLive segment where photographer Lindsay Adler walks through a Halloween-themed portrait shoot. The subject has a full zombie makeup look, which honestly makes the lighting instruction easier to follow: you can see every shadow and highlight doing its job in real time.

Stop Burning Out Your Skin Retouching: How to Use Dodge & Burn the Way It Actually Works

Stop Burning Out Your Skin Retouching: How to Use Dodge & Burn the Way It Actually Works

For a long time, I was that retoucher whose skin edits looked like they’d been ironed flat. A client once told me my portraits looked “a little plastic,” and I knew exactly what she meant, even if I didn’t want to admit it. I was heavy-handed with my tools, rushing toward a result instead of building toward it. Dodge and burn was supposed to be my solution, but I’d learned it in a way that made things worse, not better.

Frequency Separation: The Technique That Stopped My Edits From Looking Like Plastic

Frequency Separation: The Technique That Stopped My Edits From Looking Like Plastic

A client called me once to say my retouching looked “like a video game character.” I had spent two hours on that image. I had smoothed every pore, every shadow, every subtle line, and I handed back something that looked like it had been poured from a mold. She was kind about it, but I still have that file saved on an old hard drive as a personal cautionary tale. That was the moment I understood that I had been solving the wrong problem.

The Channel Extraction Trick I Wish I'd Known Years Ago (Plus a 3D Paint Splatter Technique Worth Stealing)

The Channel Extraction Trick I Wish I'd Known Years Ago (Plus a 3D Paint Splatter Technique Worth Stealing)

There’s a specific kind of frustration that comes from spending twenty minutes wrestling with Quick Selection on a wispy, complex subject, only to end up with a mask that looks like it was cut out with safety scissors. I’ve been there more times than I care to admit. Early in my retouching work, I treated channels like that drawer in the kitchen where you throw things you don’t understand but can’t bring yourself to delete.

Frequency Separation for Real Skin: What I Took Away from Jessica Kobeissi's Retouch & Chill

Frequency Separation for Real Skin: What I Took Away from Jessica Kobeissi's Retouch & Chill

There is a particular kind of dread that comes with opening a portrait file and seeing skin that needs serious work. Not “dust off a blemish” work. Real texture, real unevenness, real light that caught every pore. Early in my retouching career I handled that dread badly. I’d over-smooth, over-blur, and hand back something that looked more like a vinyl doll than a person. A client once told me the skin looked “plastic.

Before You Touch a Single Slider: What Professional Photo Editors Actually Look For

Before You Touch a Single Slider: What Professional Photo Editors Actually Look For

There’s a skill that took me years to develop, and it has nothing to do with Photoshop. It’s knowing what to look at before you open a single panel. Early in my retouching career, I would dive straight into skin work, dodging and burning and smoothing, only to deliver a finished file and have a client point out that the framing was off, or that a distracting element was pulling the eye away from the subject.

What Portrait Artists Need to Know About AI and Your Public Photos

What Portrait Artists Need to Know About AI and Your Public Photos

What Portrait Artists Need to Know About AI and Your Public Photos I’ve been watching the intersection of artificial intelligence and professional photography with careful attention, and there’s something happening right now that deserves our collective focus. Meta has quietly activated an AI image generation feature that’s fundamentally changing how our public Instagram photos can be used—and honestly, it caught many of us off guard. The Default Setting That Changes Everything Here’s what’s happening: if you have a public Instagram profile, Meta’s new AI tools can now pull your photos and use them as training material or as references for generating new AI images.

How to Paint Convincing Light Streaks in Photoshop Using a Wacom Tablet

How to Paint Convincing Light Streaks in Photoshop Using a Wacom Tablet

There is a specific kind of frustration that comes from knowing exactly what a finished image should look like and not having the tools to get there. For years, I added light effects to my beauty work with a mouse, and the results were stiff. The streaks were uniform. The glow felt pasted on. It was not until I finally committed to learning a pressure-sensitive tablet that everything clicked, and it happened faster than I expected.

Never Miss a Tutorial

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

Subscribe Now