Tutorial: 2-Minute Photoshop Tools for Better Portraits

While I have been using Adobe Photoshop for over 15 years doing mostly non-portrait editing work, I have become lazy in portrait photography due to Adobe Photoshop Lightroom allowing me to achieve 95% of what I need for amazing photos. My typical portrait workflow ends in Lightroom once the exposure and color tones are to my liking. I have not bothered to go in and cleanup facial features using Photoshop for many years now.

Just recently, I discovered creativeLIVE classrooms through the local Edmonton photography Meetup group. Today, I watched 30 minutes of glamor photography live with Sue Bryce and was blown away by the simplicity of her workflow in Photoshop itself. In her classroom, she predominantly used three tools in Photoshop for 90% of her workflow, which allowed her to edit most photos in just under 2 minutes. I quickly tried that technique myself on a photo taken yesterday.

The main tools used in her workshop were as follows (with her settings shown) and their use is explained further later in this post:

  1. Clone Stamp Tool: 100% Opacity, 10 to 20% Flow
  2. Dodge / Burn Tool: 50% Exposure
  3. Brush Tool: 100% Opacity, 1% Flow
  4. Eraser Tool: 100% Opacity, 10% Flow

Clone Stamp Tool

Cloning was used to take away wrinkles and other unsightly blemishes from the skin. It is pretty straight forward to use the tool by following the flow of light on the face. However, care must be taken so that the shape and features of the face are not drastically altered when using this tool. In a more extreme case, this tool could also be used to soften many of wrinkles or freckles on the model. The goal here is not to hide or eliminate these distinguishing features, but rather, to soften them so as to take attention away from them.

Dodge / Burn Tool

Mostly used to bring some pop into the eyes and makeup, this tool was used to make the whites of the eyes whiter and the color in the cornea brighter and more captivating. If the model is wearing eye-liner, then the burn tool could be used to darken those eye lines as well.

Brush Tool

With a lime or light green swatch, the brush tool was used by Sue to neutralize the reds in the eyes and any other areas where reds are undesirable. There are many other more complex ways to achieve this in Photoshop, but Sue used her background in photo touch-ups and color mixing to do this.

Warp Tool

The warp tool was used to adjust body shape and feature lines. While many fashion and portrait photographers have used Photoshop’s Liquify tool, Sue showed a technique where the area to be transformed is selected, copied to a new layer, and warped to tweak the shape. Sue used this feature many times to make the contour of the arms more pleasing, especially when the model’s pose made the arm look larger than it actually was. Once warped, Sue looked for any unsightly edges and feathered it in with the layer below by using the eraser tool.

Before & After

The before and after photo (above) showing the results of using just some of the techniques in the Creative Live classroom. This editing took literally 30 seconds from start to finish, but look at how much more pleasing the results are. Below are larger photos of the work I did so that you can pixel-peep.

In the photo below, you will see that:

  1. The ridges and blemishes are removed from the face.
  2. The eyes are clearer. Redness has been removed.
  3. The light coverage is balanced on both sides of the face.

Conclusions

  1. You don’t have to spend hours editing photos to make it more pleasing.
  2. creativeLIVE.com … check it out.

Winter Mall-Walking

In Edmonton, when the weather is too cold outside to do outdoor activities, sometimes the best resource we have is one of the largest malls in the world. This “used” to be the largest mall in the world, but no more. We usually spend the weekend circling the mall on both levels to get some exercise in.

Sometimes, we wish that this scene was from a tropical location in warm weather, instead of inside a concrete mall. Sure would be nice to go fishing right now in the warm sun. Fortunately, we are only a few more weeks away from summer.

Question: Where is your camera?

Is it beside you, easily accessible? Is the battery charged? Is your memory card empty?

I am a photographer that loves to be ready as you never know when the moment will strike where you need your camera. It doesn’t matter what camera you pick up, as long as the moment is special, capturing it with any type of camera is better than none at all. In a related post, I talked about reaching for the nearest camera, which is the best tool you could have at the moment.

A special moment hits in split seconds. When you recognize something worth capturing, it takes only split seconds for that moment to erode. When you reach for the closest camera, turn it on and take the shot. Don’t worry about settings or exposure or even focus. It takes merely 2 seconds for the camera to boot up and fire the first shot. After that, you can look at your settings and adjust it for the situation as needed. Too many times, people worry about their settings and by the time they are done fiddling with their camera, the moment is lost. You never know when a photographic opportunity awaits you.

My favorite go-to camera is the Panasonic Lumix DMC-LX5 10.1 MP Digital Camera with 3.8x Optical Image Stabilized Zoom and 3.0-Inch LCD – In WHITE of course!. Most of my photos are taken with it because it takes no time to boot up and the photos taken by its “Intelligent Auto (iA)” mode is spot on, sharp, dynamically bright, and amazing overall.

-44*C In Edmonton Today

The overnight low in Edmonton was -35*C, but temperatures felt like -44*C wind chill factored in. That my friend is very very cold. I dropped my wife off at work and complained all the way home how cold the steering wheel and shifter was, even with gloves on. So as soon as I get home, the logical thing to do is go outside for 15 minutes in nothing but a sweater and flip flops for a portrait session with Andy? Yeah, baby! It’s cold outside and I’m a little bit insane.

Andy at Starbucks

I’ve been looking for the Android collectible action figure for a while now as an accessory/prop for my photography. Today, while at Best Buy, I saw this little thing at the checkout counter and I had to get it for only $9.99. While Amanda was at Starbucks buying me a tea, I quickly snapped this photo with my Samsung Galaxy Nexus (how fitting).

Your One Cup Solution

After buying our Keurig B-70 B70 Platinum Single-Cup Home Brewing System, we were disappointed to see so few k-cup selections at our local stores. Most stores carried the standard coffee cups, but none of the interesting specialty flavours of coffees and teas advertised on the Keurig website.

Fortunately for us, while at Costco buying the specialty coffee maker, the customers ahead of us told us about specialty k-cup stores throughout Edmonton.  So today we stopped at one of them located in the industrial park of west Edmonton called, Your One Cup Solution. To our surprise, we found more flavors at the store than what was advertised on the website, but hey, who’s complaining.

The pictures speak for themselves. The awesome thing about this particular store is that they allow you to pick single cups in a carousel so that you don’t have to buy an entire box that you may not enjoy. The cost was $20 for 24 cups.

Check it out for yourself. Your One Cup Solution store address is 10532 178 Street NW, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada and they are open Tuesdays through Saturday from 10am-6pm.

Undertaker


Undertaker, originally uploaded by Melvin Tan.

Trying something a little different today with a low-key self-portraiture, trying to recapture some of the mood of the Undertaker character from the old World Wrestling Federation (WWF).

This was really easy to capture because I setup the tripod on the bathroom counter and shot at myself. I could easily look at myself at the mirror and setup the look and lighting that I wanted. Once the photo was captured, I could see the results from the LCD reflected on the mirror. :)

Non-Strobist Info:
50mm 1.8D on Nikon D90.
Flashlight App on iPad on my chest pointing upwards.