Is there any good Skin smoothing software

paulminus273

Suspended / Banned
Messages
544
Name
paul
Edit My Images
Yes
Most of my photography is model related so skin smoothing is important, but it is time consuming and I am not that good at it, so do any of you use Skin smoothing software and cam you recommend any. Thank you
 
Most of my photography is model related so skin smoothing is important, but it is time consuming and I am not that good at it, so do any of you use Skin smoothing software and cam you recommend any. Thank you

Portrait professional should do the trick.
 
I use lightroom, but I downloaded the free trial of Portrait Professional, and it seems good, so it's a :plusone: for me.
 
using negative clarity in lightroom doesn't work too badly
 
Occasional use of Portrait Professional, but don't go with the default settings. I always turn off the face sculpting option.
 
thank you for your help,
I am using cs4 I don't have lightroom and as the ladies are often not wearing much I need to do more than just the face which makes it a long job the way I am work at the moment
 
I just tried the demo of Portrait Professional.. wow.. never seen so many sliders on a single control panel in my life! But looked like a very able piece of software as long as you don't let it overdo it's thing (the default setting made my test model look 15 years younger and he's only 35!)
 
thank you for your help,
I am using cs4 I don't have lightroom and as the ladies are often not wearing much I need to do more than just the face which makes it a long job the way I am work at the moment


In CS4, open your image in the raw converter, Adobe Camera Raw or ACR as it is widely known. If you shoot in raw format this is what should open first when you open up a raw image.

Now, this is just for the skin softening, any exposure stuff and levels you may have to do afterwards and it may or may not affect the skin.

Set all the sliders to the default setting. Move the clarity slider to -75 and click open, once in PS save the image as whateverdifferentname.jpg/tif or which ever format you choose.

Now go to open the original file again, this time when it opens up in ACR set the sliders to default and move the clarity back to 0. Open the image.

You should have 2 open images in PS, click on the 1st image, go to select all, with the move too selected, drag the image onto the other one whilst holding the shift key, this will make sure they are aligned exactly on top of each other.

Close the 2nd image, stops any confusion on which image you are working on. You should now have one image with 2 layers on it. It should all look very soft because the top layer is the 1st image that has -75 clarity on it.

Make sure the top layer is highlighted, now add a mask, now paint on the areas in the mask with a soft brush where you do not want any softening to be applied and you should see the original image coming back through, this should be applied to eyes, lips and hair etc so that theses are not soft.

It sounds tricky and hard but once you have done it a couple of times it is really easy, it is not destructive because of the masks and if you make a mistake on the mask just switch the white/black around to repaint the original/edit depending what you mistake is. With the mask you can also set the opacity of the brush so you get as little or as much applied to the image as you want.

You can also switch the layers around before you add the mask so that you may have the blurred copy beneath and then when you apply the mask you are going to paint in the softness to the skin, it all depends on how you work and how neat you are.

Hope this helps, you can usually do a good sized image in a minute with this method and feels a lot better doing it yourself than having a plug in do it for you, plus you are learning about masks and layers too.
 
Last edited:
I like the LR Clarity and will often load a couple of layers into PS, one with and one without and play with that.

I also got Phototools 2.5 as a free gift with CS5 which looks as if it can do amazing things with portraits but I have not really had time to get to grips with it yet as I have been concentrating on learning what PS itself can do first

Edit: Tom has explained with well above, it is what I do but with LR instead of ACR but I got waylaid when I was looking to see what the other programme (Phototools) was called and having a play with it :)
 
Last edited:
thanks again for the help and tom your method sounds a lot better than the g/blur and histroy brush I have been useing
 
In CS4, open your image in the raw converter, Adobe Camera Raw or ACR as it is widely known. If you shoot in raw format this is what should open first when you open up a raw image.

Now, this is just for the skin softening, any exposure stuff and levels you may have to do afterwards and it may or may not affect the skin.

Set all the sliders to the default setting. Move the clarity slider to -75 and click open, once in PS save the image as whateverdifferentname.jpg/tif or which ever format you choose.

Now go to open the original file again, this time when it opens up in ACR set the sliders to default and move the clarity back to 0. Open the image.

You should have 2 open images in PS, click on the 1st image, go to select all, with the move too selected, drag the image onto the other one whilst holding the shift key, this will make sure they are aligned exactly on top of each other.

Close the 2nd image, stops any confusion on which image you are working on. You should now have one image with 2 layers on it. It should all look very soft because the top layer is the 1st image that has -75 clarity on it.

Make sure the top layer is highlighted, now add a mask, now paint on the areas in the mask with a soft brush where you do not want any softening to be applied and you should see the original image coming back through, this should be applied to eyes, lips and hair etc so that theses are not soft.

It sounds tricky and hard but once you have done it a couple of times it is really easy, it is not destructive because of the masks and if you make a mistake on the mask just switch the white/black around to repaint the original/edit depending what you mistake is. With the mask you can also set the opacity of the brush so you get as little or as much applied to the image as you want.

You can also switch the layers around before you add the mask so that you may have the blurred copy beneath and then when you apply the mask you are going to paint in the softness to the skin, it all depends on how you work and how neat you are.

Hope this helps, you can usually do a good sized image in a minute with this method and feels a lot better doing it yourself than having a plug in do it for you, plus you are learning about masks and layers too.

Similar to what i do. But i duplicate the original image, add a surface blur and use a mask to paint the blur on as required.

No idea if there are better/easier ways. I'm pretty new to it myself.
 
Nik Color Efex Pro has an excellent 'Dynamic skin softener'. The beauty of it is that you colour pick the skin tone so it only affects those tones in the image, you can fine tune the colour reach, the small/medium/large details and use the 'u-points' to further target the effect.

My preferred skin softening generally involves a pinch of negative clarity then a spoonful of Nik at low to medium opacity to keep it all natural looking.
 
Nik Color Efex Pro has an excellent 'Dynamic skin softener'. The beauty of it is that you colour pick the skin tone so it only affects those tones in the image, you can fine tune the colour reach, the small/medium/large details and use the 'u-points' to further target the effect.

My preferred skin softening generally involves a pinch of negative clarity then a spoonful of Nik at low to medium opacity to keep it all natural looking.
Discovered Nik by coming across this thread. :), am trying the demo version and seems fantastic so far, although I haven't explored much of it, just tried the default setting and looks very promising. Up until now I was using the manual typical gaussian blur stuff etc. Pretty tedious and can easily get out of hand and at times doesn't exactly do the job perfectly.

Do you care just going through the steps on how you work it out and expanding a little the part
My preferred skin softening generally involves a pinch of negative clarity then a spoonful of Nik at low to medium opacity to keep it all natural looking.
? Am not proficient in pp but also not totally a layman so your breakdown or any brief explanation would go a long way to understand how to make best use of this plugin.
Thanks in advance
 
Do you care just going through the steps on how you work it out and expanding a little the part ?

Nik have a load of archived webinars on their products HERE... Probably far better explanations than me vainly trying to type it all out!

If you haven't got Lightroom for the negative clarity bit, the 'Tonal Contrast' filter in your Nik Color (sic!) Efex does a similar job and is probably more controllable anyway... just dial down the sliders to create your own tasty recipe... great on blotchy skin!

Just remember to be subtle with everything, when you've applied a Nik effect it will be in a new layer so crank down the opacity of that layer until the enhancement looks natural.
 
Nik have a load of archived webinars on their products HERE... Probably far better explanations than me vainly trying to type it all out!

If you haven't got Lightroom for the negative clarity bit, the 'Tonal Contrast' filter in your Nik Color (sic!) Efex does a similar job and is probably more controllable anyway... just dial down the sliders to create your own tasty recipe... great on blotchy skin!

Just remember to be subtle with everything, when you've applied a Nik effect it will be in a new layer so crank down the opacity of that layer until the enhancement looks natural.

That sounds exceptional, really appreciate that.
I do have LR and its part of my workflow. I will try both and see the result anyway.
Thanks for that excellent link also, will have a look at it now

Thanks

Amin
 
portrait professional if you want to go down the route of making girls look like maniquins but its no quicker than the bog standard blur/sharpen layers TBH

Most of my photography is model related so skin smoothing is important, but it is time consuming and I am not that good at it, so do any of you use Skin smoothing software and cam you recommend any. Thank you
 
Back
Top