Posted by Diana Eftaiha on Dec 23, 2010 in Post-Processing | 9 comments
Photo airbrushing and retouching is quite a popular thing in the fashion and beauty industry. You see models in magazines with perfect skin, sharp eyes, evenly toned faces, no blemishes or lines and you think to yourself is that for real? Well for the most part, no it’s not. It’s always the right touch of makeup, coupled with photo editing and appropriate lighting that yield this new born, baby skin result that you see out there and today I’ve chosen this video that Cameron Rad has posted on his YouTube channel to show you exactly how to create that effect on your own. It’s a really useful, highly professional video that I recommend for all editorial fashion and beauty photography enthusiasts out there.
cool video I’ve actually seen this before but I have forgotten all about it. Thanks for the reminder. It’s so worth it
Your blog is beautiful, gets better every day.
Congratulations.
I love this tutorial part.
Watched two today.
Best wishes and thank you.
thank you Max =) glad you’re enjoying my posts and good to see you like the new design. i was going for a minimal light design =)
Great tutorial! I love retouching portraits. I am always on the look out for new skin retouching techniques and I have to say most of this one is new to me.
Thanks,
Matthew
glad you enjoyed the vid Matthew. thank you for stopping by!
i have tried out so many tutorials on retouching and airbrushing and alll i can say is this is the best ive come across so far, i wasn’t even all that time consuming to try either.
props to you man =]
This is a great tutorial. I agree with the comment above, one of the best re-touching techniques I’ve tried. THANK YOU for helping me create better faces
my pleasure guys. Thanks to Cameron for this great vid!
Hello Cameron, Many thanks for this excellent tutorial. My retouching skill has been greatly enhanced. At first I was having problems then I realize that I have to uncheck ‘sample all layers’ at the top of the Option bar when using the clone stamp or any of the retouching tools on the texture layer. Thanks again