4 Tips for Editing Photos in Photoshop

4 Tips for Editing Photos in Photoshop

In this article we will present you with some great tips to retouch your photos using Photoshop. Let’s take a look!


Before We Begin

Let’s take a look at the original photo that we will be using courtesy of Alraunie-Stock on Deviant Art.


1. Study Your Photo First

It’s very tempting to dive into a photo and erase the flaws you immediately detect, but before making any major changes, try to study it first. A photo tells you a lot about itself. Notice the relationship of the light source and the shadows it casts on your subject or the photo’s environment. Take into consideration how the original photo looks in order to understand its potential.

Make mental notes of which details will stay and which ones will be omitted. Identify which area will be the main focal point that will hold your audience’s attention, and what it will take to highlight it. Once the direction you take becomes clearer, then proceed with your alterations.


2. Use The Crop Tool

The crop tool is one of the most underutilized tools in Photoshop. Just because a photographer takes a picture doesn’t mean that everything in the picture has to stay. Looking at this photograph, we’ll see the model is a young woman with beautiful big eyes. However, the rest of the body is a bit over-posed, and therefore diminishes the intensity of her eyes.

By cropping the photo we notice a few things happening. First, the tight shot brings the viewer’s attention back to her face. Then the photo becomes "heavier" on the right side, meaning the viewer’s eyes dart straight to her face, highlighting her gorgeous eyes. Lastly, did you notice this crop makes the photo seem more cinematic? While the original photo looks like a model, the cropped shot could be a still of a scene, perhaps where we catch the actress’s glace back at the camera. Great photography creates an unspoken story that only the viewer plays out in their head.


3. Edit Photo Before Removing Flaws

Nearly all photos should be adjusted with either Curves or Brightness and Contrast in Photoshop. Making these adjustments brings a newfound intensity to the photo, making it go from dull to full of life. While many focus on removing flaws, I’d rather make all the final adjustments on the photo’s overall mood and color scheme first.

We want to create a mood that is appropriate for her expression and look, so I first pass the photo through Curves to intensify the lighting, and then move onto editing with Color Balance. As mentioned previously, I wanted the focus of this photo to be the girl’s gaze, so Color Balance allows me to alter the general color of her hair and the environment while maintaining color harmony. Notice how these changes altered the mood of the photo by taking the attention away from her hair color. Lastly, I added a layer of a solid dark blue color and switched the blending mode to exclusion for an air of mystery.


4. Keep Airbrushing Natural

The last step in completing this photo is removing flaws. When you airbrush a photo, try to keep it as natural as possible because overly processed photos are always obvious to their viewers. I used the Stamp tool to cover a wide range of edits including the removal of stray hairs, bags under the eyes, and piercings. The stamp tool allows me to paint over flaws by sourcing nearby areas, creating a seamless transition from what was once there to what is now gone.

Try not to remove flaws by blurring the photo because you’ll create an unnatural effect where the skin is blurry while everything else remains sharp. Instead, you can use a slight blur to focus on small areas where your subject has large pores. Also, use the Liquify tool in moderation. Here, the Liquify tool was used to shape her hair so it appears shorter, and for minimal edits around her face.


Final Result

You can bring out the best qualities of any photo by paying close attention to its details. Base your editing decisions on what works best for the photo, and you’ll be able to compliment any photographer’s work in no time. Good luck!

  • http://graphicriver.net/user/Giallo?ref=Giallo Giallo

    Very interesting, easy and useful for everyone

    • http://www.hyperdo.com/ Maria Wendt

      I agree with you, Giallo. These tips are easy to implement and explained in a very straight-forward manner. The way the bags under her eyes were removed was amazing! Thanks, Melody, for this article!

  • http://www.facebook.com/vietdesigner Việt Designer

    I don’t really like the final result :)

    • mark

      me too. ^^

    • http://www.dehex.ro dany

      same here

  • zeejay21

    There’s some basic photo-retouching here & the washed-out end result looks like something out of Instagram.

    However, this is really common amongst youngsters who want a cool, hip & retro-style looking photo. There’s more to photo-editing than just this such as revealing hidden details, cooling/warming, vignettes, advanced blending, correct exposure etc.

    Just remember this tip when working with photos:

    Light is the language of photography.

    It means that mastering light in photos is the key to great pictures.

    • http://graphicriver.net/user/Giallo?ref=Giallo Giallo

      We’re approaching in a new era: making great photos with lights was the procedure, working with Photoshop is the tradition, using crappy filters and upload trash to Instagram is the innovation.

      I do appreciate your reminder, but the “vignette/blur/crappy filter” is the new Tool wich makes you a photographer in seconds. Funny

  • http://tareq.carbonmade.com tareq

    very GREAT & helpful tut, but the final is not as good as the rest

  • Harry

    I actually like the original + curves one the best?

    • Dane

      I agree, I’m a big fan of high color saturation.

    • blakFYR

      Yeah, me too- I just loved the way it stood out- It placed a little more emphasis on the eyes IMO, but I did still love the final outcome

  • https://www.facebook.com/pages/SPARKcreative/180373278739210?ref=tn_tnmn SPARKcreative

    I do not like the result of step 2.3 and 3.3 … i think yo should stop at step 3.1 and apply step 4 but is only my personal opinion. Good stuff at all …

  • Kieran Hawes

    Very useful insight, the contrast between the original and final image is brilliant, but isn’t overdone or damaging to the photograph, really great!

  • Huzaifa Ahmed

    I don’t like it!

    • http://hootiesroadside.99k.org Chad

      Good thing you told us. I don’t think we could have lived without your invaluable insight.

  • exrtatoe

    Piercings : 80$
    Adobe CS5 : Expensive
    Removing Piercings : Priceless

    • http://hootiesroadside.99k.org Chad

      LOL, where is the SUPER Like button?

  • http://www.cgvector.com cgvector

    Very nice tips but very bad final picture……… but after all great tuts… thanks.

  • http://bn.luckyfm.info LuckyFM

    nice tuts for the beginner

  • silent

    4 tips how to make from ordinary picture a piece of crap…

  • Dougieladd

    Results are always subjective to the viewer. It’s about learning techniques. Whether you like it or you don’t is irrelavent. It’s only relavent to the client. If they like it and it fits a ‘mood’ then job done.

    • http://venomgraphics.x10.mx James Headrick

      Thank you. Thank you, thank you, thank you. Really tiring to see people complain about the result of a guide/tutorial.

    • http://fraxyl.bandcamp.com fraxyl

      Well said. I like most of the end result, but I don’t really understand why you changed the hair at the back from hanging down naturally to defying gravity.

      silent’s comment is a great waste of twelve words (or eleven words and one number if you want to be technical)

      Regardless of your opinion on the end result, the workflow tips are solid.

      • http://hootiesroadside.99k.org Chad

        Agreed.

      • http://melodynieves.com Melody

        I appreciate the feedback on this guys…

        I would have disregarded a crop/retouching hair and piercings if her body pose matched the hair/piercings…but it didn’t, and because it didn’t I chose to take the photo in a new direction that would work better.

        There were no prejudices against colored hair/piercings, but as mentioned in the article, for this example, I wanted the viewer to go straight to her eyes instead of bouncing around to the smaller details.

        (fraxyl)
        Many of the changes were made to see how far it could be taken from the original photograph–and didn’t mean for it to look “instagram-ed” as someone mentioned. I changed the hair and a lot of the other details because I wanted to focus on her eyes, and took away anything that was distracting (I was also trying to mimic a popular hairstyle of short in the back and long in the front).

        (John)
        The blemishes/etc were removed last because my initial focus was to figure out how to tone down the hair and anything that was distracting from her eyes. Many may just change the hair with hue/saturation but by color correcting the entire photo you can create better color harmony as a whole.

        (Andrew)
        Good, untouched, photography is hard to come by in general (if you don’t take it yourself) but hence the conclusion of trying to bring out the best qualities of any photo, even if it isn’t the best one to start off with. I was hoping this was a lesson in working with what you got (or sometimes what you’re often supplied by clients).

        This is an article about WORKFLOW (study it, crop it, avoid flaw removal temptation til the end, color harmony/etc), not an airbrushing tutorial, I apologize to whomever thought it was the latter.

        Thanks!

    • http://iheartmario.com Mario McMeans

      OMG…dude thank you. What people ALWAYS forget is one, art is ALWAYS subjective and two these are techniques that if not known could be used to enhance photos or manips. There’s ALWAYS something new to learn.

  • critism

    How to mess up a photo.

  • OmaR

    She looked beautiful at the first place, all you needed to do was a simple crop.

  • http://hootiesroadside.99k.org Chad

    I thought adding the exclusion layer made it look to much like an Instagram photo. The tutorial is GREAT!!! I just think that the darker image fit the mood a bit better. Still… a beautiful photo to work with. Thank you Melody.

  • karen

    the original has purple hair, that’s the whole feel of the photo, now its just another bland instagram.

  • Ken

    Thanks for the overview… I’m taking away the following: start with global edits that get the photo looking ‘correct’, then specific edits to remove/adjust details, lastly work on adjusting the ‘feel’ to match either your or your client’s aesthetic and use of the photo.

    • http://melodynieves.com Melody
      Author

      Thanks Ken, that’s exactly what I was going for with this article! Perhaps if I had used different photos for each point people would realize this isn’t a tutorial for the image given, but an article about workflow….my fault!

  • Andrew

    Biggest problem in today’s digital era, is the fact that many people think they can just point and shoot and not worry too much about the actual composition, lighting etc.. they can always FIX it later.. Sadly the only way to get a great photo, is to take one.. Photography like art, is a very personal thing. one person loves it, another hates it. There really is not right or wrong way.. and while there may be some useful tips in this tutorial, to me the end result looks dull and lifeless.. while the original was perfectly acceptable

    You should learn photography BEFORE you learn photoshop.. not the other way around….

  • http://www.casualgamedev.com Shajedul

    Nice tutorial. Hair stile is cool.

  • http://Filearena.net16.net Prakash

    hmm…. Not interesting :P

  • http://dotanova.com/ DotaNova

    Nice and simple tutorial.

  • http://herozon.com Zarel

    Aha! What a useful tip! I like the idea of “focus”, it gives a lot easier to edit that image! Awesome!

  • Fred

    the color correction should always be the last phase as the cropping, you should always start with corrections and airbrushing cause you have much more information on the image.
    And if you finally want to take back and change the mood, you’ll always have a chance.

  • John

    Can you explain why you feel its best to apply filters etc before re-touching blemishes etc? Its not a critisism, but I personally prefer to work the other way around, so would like to hear your thoughts…

  • Andrew

    Can you explain why it is necessary to edit a photo, which has over 40 pages of really great comments.. Why do people feel the need to remove blemishes and apply filters to everything… Photoshop is a last resort when all else fails in photography, photoshop may just save the day… but it’s NOT an excuse for bad photography.. Sure have fun with your images, play around, experiment. but please… you should never take this sort of thing as “written in stone” as I said earlier, art / photography is a very personal thing. Some will love it, some will hate it.. That’s why you cannot teach someone to be an artist or a photographer. You can teach them how to paint or use a camera.. the rest is up to them.. If they’ve got that creative spark or the eye for it, then maybe one day they hit he big time..the rest will just say, well I gave it a go once.

  • http://www.cubes-it.com Cubes-IT

    useful tutorial
    thanks

  • Phenotype

    The one thing I found disappointing about this tutorial is that you don’t show us what settings or values you used in Step 3. This should be a basic requirement of having a tutorial published on here. For those of us who don’t know how to use Curves or Color Balance and what sort of results to expect it’s extremely helpful to see what settings and values you’ve applied. Without that information this tutorials is almost useless.

    • http://venomgraphics.x10.mx James Headrick

      But it’s not a tutorial about settings or anything like that – it’s about workflow, and tips for editing a photo. The settings she used are not relevant in the least.

  • http://www.flickr.com/jasonracey Jason Racey

    With the crop you’ve faked a good composition from a bad one. The same goes for the hair removal. If you don’t want it in the photograph then don’t include it the frame. What I’m reading here is “how to fix it in Photoshop”. What would be more interesting is a minimum set of steps to perform on already good photographs. For example I almost always apply some fine-tuning to exposure, color, and sharpness. I suppose I’m comparing a different type of photography. If you have to prepare a photograph for commercial purposes then the steps here are probably very useful.

  • shane

    i think the article is great and i like the finished product – all about her eyes – but more importantly the lesson behind the article. Good job!

  • T.G

    I’m noticing a lot of complaints. Once upon a time the art community thought Photography wasn’t art, but look at it now. so Photoshop is a new process of creating art, get over yourselves. What it says to me when a person takes a ‘crappy’ photo and makes it great in Photoshop, is that they don’t care so much for Photography but it’s creating a product in Photoshop that is important. Sooo once again…. get over yourselves.

    The point of the article was to give tips on what could be done to improve a photo.

  • http://www.webtemplates-creare.com/ Paul Weston

    Thought this was a great article and one that is easy to understand. I think the points you make are spot on and you have not gone over the top and kept true to the original image. These are tips that everyone should be using and ones that I will keep in mind when editing images for my sites. Great article and I look forward to more from you.

  • Ladheed

    good work. but it is not an proffesional edit!! :P

  • http://profiles.google.com/lunaticprophet csr x

    Really?? You took an interesting photo.. made it better in the first two steps and then went on to butcher it! Her hair color and piercing tell us something about who she is. You discarded that without a second thought and left a generic image of a girl… BUT NOT THAT GIRL! And the Exclusion layer is just hackneyed! How many freakin’ times do we have to see that and bokeh covering everything!?