Photoshop Tutorial - How to get Great
Skintones with your Digital Photography
By: Robert Provencher
Good
skintones. The search for the holy grail of digital
photography. I have been banging our heads against
the wall for years trying to perfect "THE ONE SIZE
FITS ALL" solution to working with skintones and I'm
talking about capturing, workflow, output, the whole
nine yards. What I've figured out so far is that
skintones are somewhat subjective. The procedures
that ultimately create good skintones are as
follows:
Good capture:
When you capture the image 99% of your job is done.
If your exposures are off and your colorbalance is
off, then your skintones will be off. Of course this
means your lightmeter will be your best friend
(second to your dog). Be on top of your exposures
like dirt on a pig. Know your histograms and image
tones. Don't just use your LCD as a reference. Your
LCD brightness varies, and is not 100% reliable to
use on it's own, however it is an integral tool that
works with everything else. Never get lazy here,
always check your exposure, know your exposures and
keep it accurate. Make this a part of your mind set
and workflow. And don't forget to test new stuff,
never assume....
Colorbalance:
I like to shoot a greycard under the lighting
conditions we are shooting in as a custom
whitebalance setting. For some reason a greycard
seems to work better for us than a whitecard. What
can I say. I get images that are neutral, I can warm
them up later if I choose. However, for many digital
photographers, using a white card to create their
custom white balance weems to work just fine.
Workflow:
I like to get an idea of what a good skintone is by
using the colorpicker. Now remember, skintones are
subjective, so it's purely arbitrary but you will
get used to it in time. So, as a rule of thumb,
using the color picker, depending on the actual
pigmentation of the subject we find the reds are
about 20% higher than the green and about 30 - 40%
higher than the blue. Since during the capture the
tone has been turned off (in camera parameters), I
can add more to the skintone by using colorbalance
and saturation.
Assuming that you have good capture, (exposure/whitebalance),
there are several ways to acquire or enhance
skintones. One of the best ways is by using the
selective color (IMAGE/ADJUSTMENTS/SELECTIVE
COLOR, or ALT-I-A-S). I have been using this for
a little while now, and so far it's rendered me
outstanding skintones. Here's how it works.
Simply reduce the amount of cyan in the reds.
Usually about 40-50%. I could go more, but I hold
off. Why? Because when I adjust the contrast later
it will bring out more tones in the image, thus
giving me more red in the skin. There is al lot or
red in the skin, especially caucasians, so by doing
this technique you will give most people more warmth
and glow to their skin tone- but be careful!! Do not
over do it.
The thing I like about using the selective color
this way, is that I am only working with the red
tones. If I didn't want to affect any other reds
(like the reds in her coat) I can simply do several
things:
1. make a selection around her face and then
perform the adjustments.
OR
2. after the adjustments simply use the
history brush and erase the areas I don't wish
affected.
That's it. Simple isn't it, when you get down to the
basics.
Robert Provencher has been a professional portrait
and wedding photographer for over 25 years. He has
trained hundreds of professional photographers
throughout North America in live workshops and
through his online forum. Robert has authored
several manuals on digital photography and
photogaphy marketing.
http://www.nobsphotosuccess.com
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