Hair Retouching in Portraits: The Art of Natural Enhancement

Hair Retouching in Portraits: The Art of Natural Enhancement

Hair Retouching in Portraits: The Art of Natural Enhancement When we’re retouching portraits, hair often gets overlooked—but it shouldn’t. Beautiful hair can completely transform a portrait, while poorly executed hair edits are immediately noticeable and can undo all your other hard work. I’ve spent years perfecting hair retouching techniques, and I’m excited to share what I’ve learned with you. The key to successful hair retouching is understanding that less is often more.

Frequency Separation: The Game-Changing Technique for Flawless Portrait Skin

Frequency Separation: The Game-Changing Technique for Flawless Portrait Skin

Frequency Separation: The Game-Changing Technique for Flawless Portrait Skin When I first learned about frequency separation, it transformed how I approach portrait retouching. Instead of struggling to smooth skin without losing texture, or fix color issues without creating a plastic appearance, I suddenly had a technique that lets me work on these problems independently. If you’ve felt frustrated trying to retouch skin naturally, I’m excited to walk you through this method.

Dodge and Burn: The Sculpting Technique Every Portrait Retoucher Needs

Dodge and Burn: The Sculpting Technique Every Portrait Retoucher Needs

Dodge and Burn: The Sculpting Technique Every Portrait Retoucher Needs When I first learned dodge and burn, everything changed about how I approached portrait retouching. This isn’t just another Photoshop tool—it’s the difference between a flat, processed-looking edit and a photo that looks naturally refined. I’m excited to walk you through this technique because once you master it, you’ll use it on nearly every portrait you touch. What Dodge and Burn Actually Does Let me be direct: dodge and burn is digital sculpting.