gooble wrote in post #6751747
Yes. Does she have especially bad skin?
My personal opinion on the matter may differ from others but I think less is better. I like to see skin texture and detail to a degree. I don't sharpen it but I don't think it needs to be smoothed into oblivion. What I like to do is heal any obvious blemishes and get rid of any shiny spots if there is any and then add a little soft glow and tailor it to the situation with the opacity slider and if you don't want the glow applied to the whole shot mask it out. The soft glow I use just puts a faint smoothing that lessens harsh creases or wrinkles. On young girls with nice skin it almost isn't needed.
I hate, hate, hate the 'Playboy' smoothed over look. It is so utterly fake looking. The best thing you could probably do is get them to have a good makeup job before the shoot. That would probably handle 90% of any problems. But what do I know I'm no professional.
Edit: just let me add that I don't think you way over did the smoothing. It's really not that bad but I don't like it that much from the start. People do much much worse. #1 is most noticable. The others look good. I may have a different opinon on them if I could see them full size. Can you post one without the skin healing? She is a pretty model BTW.
Here comes a 100% crop before and after:
| HTTP response: 404 | MIME changed to 'text/html' | Byte size: ZERO |
I agree with you on using a make up artist to handle most of the problem but i dont know anyone that can do make up and cant afford to pay someone either. I also think that the picture looks better full size as the downsampling adds a bit of smoothness too.