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09/27/2005 11:43:52 PM · #1 |
As you can see in the first shot clearly lost the nose. Yes this is a sad attempt for helpful comments on my lastest portfolio additions-LOL!
But really, is it that I'm using too much lighting in that area and so I lose it in editing? I also lost my friends nose and finally gave up and through it out.
More shots feel free to critique(was just playing around)
almost lost nose here too

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09/27/2005 11:56:01 PM · #2 |
You could mask the nose in part of the processing, or burn in the details after the fact. All the detail is not gone. Your friend is hot, BTW. :-)
edit: like the first one best.
Message edited by author 2005-09-27 23:56:37. |
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09/27/2005 11:57:40 PM · #3 |
You can have these. I have extras.
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09/28/2005 12:02:31 AM · #4 |
Burn on the nose, area select and a little contrast boost. |
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09/28/2005 01:59:57 AM · #5 |
Glow effects typically compress bright area tonalities together. One way to counteract this is with history brush; do your glow on a duplicate layer then use history brush to restore a bit of detail from the base layer.
R.
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09/28/2005 08:13:05 AM · #6 |
Thanks guys. I do all my work in one layer since I'm self learning and have not really learned the layers thing yet. Guess it's time too!
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