Realistic Makeup Application in Photoshop

Realistic Makeup Application in Photoshop

Tutorial Details
  • Applications Used: Adobe Photoshop CS3
  • Difficulty: Beginner
  • Estimated Completion Time: 1 - 2 Hours
Download Source Files

Final Product What You'll Be Creating

It’s true. Women spend a lot of time getting ready. That is because the makeup application process is quite tedious and time-consuming. The physical process of applying makeup involves concealing blemishes and painting the face with rich colors. In many ways, the process mirrors that of digital retouching techniques. In this tutorial, we will explain how to apply makeup digitally using many of the same techniques that women use to apply physical makeup to their own faces. Let’s get started!


Tutorial Assets

The following assets were used during the production of this tutorial.


Some Things To Consider Before You Start

  • Retouch according to what best compliments your subject’s specific features.
  • Make sure the colors are synonymous with the mood and aesthetic you’re shooting for.
  • Decide what to add or subtract from preexisting makeup.
  • Always improve the clarity and intensity of your work through layer adjustments.

Step 1

Natural makeup is all about creating flawless looking skin. So make an assessment of your photo. In this particular case we have a stock photo of a woman with virtually no visible makeup on except for mascara. This photo is perfect because we won’t have to create false lashes later on. The main makeup concepts you’ll be learning today are concealing, contouring, and highlighting. Feel free to make literal or mental notes of which areas to correct.


Step 2

Duplicate the original photo layer and place into a group. This is where all the makeup changes will occur; you can flip back to the original photo at any time to compare the changes you’ve made. Next go to Filter > Liquify and begin adjusting the structure of your model’s face. Use the Forward Warp Tool to create a slimmer appearance by bringing in the sides of her cheek, forehead, and jaw line.


Step 3

We will continue using the Liquify option throughout this tutorial, so feel free to make adjustments to the facial structure until you’re satisfied. Currently the model’s expression seems a little down, so we can alter it by lifting crucial areas of her face such as the corners of her mouth, her eyebrows, and the corners of her eyes. Now her expression is more pleasant. You can also quickly straighten her nose by pulling it to the right.


Step 4

Typically, people use the Bloat Tool to create fuller lips, but in excess it can lead to an unnatural bulge. For subjects with thinner lips, think about using the Forward Warp Tool instead to pull the lips into a more natural shape.


Step 5

Use the Clone Stamp Tool at a low opacity to softly erase spots, lighten dark circles, and lessen wrinkles by sourcing nearby areas. It’s almost like a regular brush, so using it correctly can create a subtle effect of soft, clear skin. This is similar to the purpose of liquid foundation which helps to even out skin tone. Use this tool to soften the harshness of the lashes by sweeping a thin layer of color over them. You may also notice that we brought the photo back into Liquify to create the appearance of higher cheekbones.


Step 6

Filling out the eyebrows with a pencil or powder is usually an essential step that all girls remember. Eyebrows are so important because they frame the face and ultimately clean up our look. Using the Stamp Tool, carefully stamp along the shape of the eyebrows to create the base. Select the Brush Tool to finish them. First hit the Alt key to collect the color of the brow then use a hard, low opacity round brush to make realistic strokes of hair along the brow. Use the Eraser to clean them up. If one brow looks better than the other, use the Lasso Tool to select the better brow and copy and paste it onto a new layer. Go to Edit > Transform > Flip Horizontal, then right-click and select Free Transform to position into place.


Step 7

Select a pale area of skin with the Eyedropper. Use both the Brush and Stamp Tools to paint a soft pale color around the bridge of the nose and underneath the eyes at an angle all the way up to the top of the cheekbone. In real life this step would be considered “concealer.” It helps to brighten up the under eye area and mask any overlooked discoloration.


Step 8

Now let’s add a little color to our subject. Use the Eyedropper to select the brow color. With the brush mode set to Soft Light, sweep the color at a low opacity along the cheekbone. Do this under the chin to create more shadow, and along the temples of the forehead. Real life makeup artists apply this same technique in order to “contour” the face. Use the Burn Tool to darken the hair towards the scalp to create fuller looking hair. You’ll see that this is also the last time we bring the photo into Liquify in order to adjust the chin and left cheek.


Step 9

Add a new layer. With the Brush Tool set back to Normal mode, paint the color #e4bba7 along the same areas you contoured using a soft, low opacity brush. Set the layer to Soft Light, and bring down the opacity to 48%. This effect makes the model’s skin glow and her eyes pop with color.


Step 10

Add another new layer to focus on the lip color or “lipstick”. Try to define the shape of her mouth with a hard round brush. For a soft lip finish, select the color of her top lip and fill it in using a low opacity brush to balance out the color. Do the same with the bottom lip. Avoid applying any kind of lip shine effect because it doesn’t work with this look.


Step 11

The last step to this natural makeup look is to improve the clarity and intensity of this photo. Add a New Adjustment Layer and select Curves. Make the colors of the photo more rich by bringing the curve down. Add another New Adjustment Layer for Brightness and Contrast and make the following adjustments to intensify the photo. Add a last New Adjustment Layer for Color Balance and make the following adjustments to balance everything out. This last layer also helps to intensify the actual natural makeup look.


Step 12

Professional makeup artists have to exaggerate glamorous makeup so that it picks up well on camera. Keep in mind these techniques are similar to the ones we just did, but instead create more drama to the Hollywood level.

Add a new layer for additional contouring. Like before, use the color of the brows to work from. Add more color to the cheeks, neck, and underneath the brow with a soft round brush. Nowadays, makeup artists also contour the nose to make it appear thinner. Add the same color along the side of the nose all the way up to the brow, then set the layer to Soft Light and bring down the opacity to around 70%.


Step 13

Add a new layer and set it to Hard Light. With the same color from the brow, paint along the lid of the eyes. You can even wing it out slightly and apply a small beauty mark upon the cheek for a retro makeup look. Adjust the layer opacity until you’re satisfied, in this case it’s 88%.


Step 14

Add another new layer for the lip color. We’re still going for a matte lipstick effect because it’s more suitable for this look and we’ll be adding shine in a different way in our next step. Set the layer to Soft Light and apply a thin layer of the color #971f24 to the lips with a soft round brush. Bring down the opacity to 35%.


Step 15

Lastly, add another new layer for highlights. Highlights are often done with shimmery makeup and enhance areas by making them appear brighter, fuller, and higher. Using a bright color that’s almost white, gradually apply highlights to the brows, inner eye duct areas, upper cheek bones, and Cupid’s bow with a low opacity round brush. This effect is truly what transforms the look the most, from natural to glam.


Conclusion

No matter the look you’re going for, you can learn from actual makeup techniques to enhance the realism of your retouched photos. Have fun!


Final Image

  • http://www.strshp.com Prescott Perez-Fox

    In my opinion, this is a little too much. The makeup is one thing, but you made her lose 20 lbs., which gets into the territory of outright deceit. Also, the eyebrows looks artificial. I like to paint in some individual hairs both in highlight and shadow colours to show a more natural look.

    • http://www.melodynieves.com Melody
      Author

      Hello there
      The original photo was retouched (liquified) as it would be in any normal retouching situation. Doing less is always an option but the original model’s expression seemed down so I wanted to lift it a bit, and to fix only one part of the expression would have made it off.
      You also never know what may be causing your model’s expression and have to work with what you have. I’ve retouched photos in the past of former patients and to their request removed physical cues of twitching or stiffness. Liquifying first sets the base for the future makeup steps.

      A lot of the definition you see occurs because of the added “makeup” applied (reminiscent of makeup contouring). These makeup techniques simulate going to a real life professional MUA. Feel free to do a search on “eyebrow makeup” if you have any concerns, it varies extensively in technique and color. You can always add more hairs but in this effect it will also appear softer since the final images are rather small.

      Hope this helps!

      • Lucija

        hello

        I’m with Prescott Perez-Fox on this one. If you use liquify in this amount on one face, it’s no longer a retouch, it’s a montage… you could put there another head :-) and the eyebrows do look artificial, it’s a fact… otherwise, nice job!

      • http://melodynieves.com Melody
        Author

        @Lucija Well I suppose all great professional photography is a montage then..

        The brows look “artificial” because they are lol. Natural makeup is a verrrrry loose term in the industry, and by no means is it actually natural. I only WISH I was born with perfectly arched brows lol..

        http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-fvMencgcBmU/T2GI31hAtxI/AAAAAAAACJ0/i9gYwbNAIs4/s320/New-Folder-%25283%2529132.jpg
        These are the kinds of brows I and other women apply every day (:

  • Kary

    You know…the make-up application is okay….maybe. BUT, do we REALLY need to see yet another Photoshopped version of a real woman’s pretty face…made to look like some friggin’ standard of beauty that no one can attain. Shame on you for trying. I’m so sick of this “fashion” and “beauty” magazines these days. I find it depressing that this website feels the need to promote it and tutorialize it.

    • http://www.asdasd.com Drake

      If you don’t like this tutorial then leave this page. Why are you here, just to complain?
      If you had the chance to date a supermodel or an ugly guy, I bet you’d choose the supermodel. So get out and don’t be a hypocrite.

      • Kary

        Hi Drake
        Your response is so typical of comment sections on the Internet. I wish people could come up with something new. My only real response to you is that you are obviously a man. The “beauty standard” by which “beauty” magazines have bastardized the female body is so grotesque that it’s painful to see. I have no idea how young girls are capable of growing up in this day and age without a complete disdain for their own bodies and a serious eating disorder. These types of ridiculous tutorials are all over the web on how to take a perfectly normal looking woman and turn her into something else altogether. We really don’t need another one to show us how its done. If you don’t like what I write…then read another comment. Just skip mine. Its really not that hard to do. :)

    • http://melodynieves.com Melody
      Author

      I understand your concern Kary, I’m a woman, I get it. Photoshop has been in the forefront recently for all of its controversy but people always forget why we use it.

      The woman is beautiful, just because her face is photoshopped doesn’t mean that’s taken away, just like when she puts on makeup in real life, she’s still a beautiful woman–just with makeup on. However, a photographer can’t control how well someone photographs, and the “thinnest”, “prettiest,” people can take a bad photo. You could easily tell this woman to lift her chin and put her shoulders back to create slimmer lines, but again, we have to work with what we are given.
      Our jobs as the designer is to create those alterations that save the client time and money from hiring another model who may know her angles better or has “better” features (clearer skin/smile etc).

      A client would put their product at risk if they depended on the model’s skin/shape/etc to be representative of their product in its completely natural state. So if the model eats a piece of chocolate and breaks out, should the advert stuffer because it’s “real?” No.

      Stock photography that is not retouched and with little visible makeup is RARE, (especially without eyebrow makeup–whaaa this is gold lol). But this photo is prefect cause it illustrates the common concerns and alterations that occur (lack of symmetry, expression, etc)–perfect for beginners!

      The real question is–would you buy skincare from someone with acne? (Feel free to switch those out with any product and respective “flaw”)

      • Matt

        I think her concern would be in regards to facial distortion. I don’t see a problem with digital makeup application and blemish removal, but I find it unprofessional and unacceptable for people to modify individuals features via the warp tool because ‘you didn’t find it attractive’ and therefore demean the individuals unique specificities. Society has been distorted enough, but by justifying your action to modify the lips, push in the cheeks, etc, you are simply justifying the statement that you promote falsities within todays society, and vanish into the background of the mediocre, conformist digital photo editor.

        It’s sickeningly pathetic.

        Your job as a photographer is to create realistic depictions, not lies. There is strict ethical application within photo editing theology, and you are falling into the category of an individual who has fallen strictly into a relativist view; I cheat because I see someone else cheating, and if they can do it so can I. You obviously lack a fully matured super-ego, otherwise you’d find you’d approach digital photo application with a sound ideology.

      • Kary

        Melody,
        You have mad Photoshop skills. I respect that. But I’m like the others here who are questioning the ethical standards by which a photographer or magazine would use the liquify tool and other techniques to completely change the way the model looks. By saying that they “all do it” is not a testament to it being okay…only that the beauty industry has become really distorted and dysfunctional. Someone has to take a stand and say “enough already.” I particularly like this website – http://www.beautyredefined.net/photoshop-phoniness-hall-of-shame/

  • http://www.deviantart.com Alex

    Oh my god. This is amazing!!
    Thank you for sharing.

  • http://www.thevmca.com The VMCA

    This is a great retouching tutorial, my only comment is that the make-up appears a little heavy. But having said that it simply looks like the model has applied too much – which makes the retouching by default, very, very good.

    I do a lot of photo/resto/retouching in my line of work and this is good example particularly for people to learn the skills from.

    • http://melodynieves.com Melody
      Author

      Hey VMCA
      Thanks for the crit, I totally agree. But really glad the makeup aspect looks that natural to you (: Glam makeup, especially like whats on the red carpets, gets a lil heavy handed to over compensate for the flash photography. Her hair looked so perfect for this look I couldn’t resist lol.

  • Kushan

    Ok this is awesome! :D

  • http://www.antsmagazine.com/ Unaiz

    Great job… !

  • APrather

    Good job, but not for me (Male)

  • Ed

    Very nice tutorial! I’m going to try it on my wife now.

  • Brenda

    Great, fast tut! Well demonstrated and nicely-explained. Thank you so much. I like the final image.

    • http://melodynieves.com Melody
      Author

      So glad it works out for you Brenda! Thank you and everyone really for all your comments! =)

  • http://www.toondattu.blogspot.in/ datta3

    Very nice tutorial!

  • http://www.foxajans.net fox

    very nice and effective :)

  • http://www.model-kartei.de/sedcard/bildbearbeiter/197278/ cythux

    For me is the skin retouch to much blur and 1-2 hours is ok for a beginner

  • fary

    amazing…
    thanks

  • Silvia

    Me encanto! esta espectacular el tutorial!

  • Andrew

    Hi, thanks for posting. Very helpfull techniques.

  • Lil

    I admit my mouth gaped a little when I saw the source file and how the first step was liquifying the baby fat from this poor model’s face. I was a little surprised, because it is a little much to presume to do—the only context we are given is this is a makeup tutorial. But obviously the fat sucking is a case by case thing, the author is just showing us the technique, as a bonus (I’m assuming).

    But, I mean, honestly, “standard of beauty” and all, you are probably going to have buckle into that standard at some point as a professional…it sucks, but some might call it making money. Take it or leave it.

    As for how fake the results look, yes, it is a touch unnatural looking (personally I think its because of the last step where the curves and such get blown out a little too much so it accentuates all the alterations). But the techniques are there for someone who wants to learn. It’s a solid tutorial that’s very well written. All you have to do is take the basics from this and spend a lot of time on the details—that’s how you achieve something that is as natural as you want it to be.

  • http://www.khocet.com Khocet

    nice post..wanna try it’s…Tq admin

  • http://www.miguelbatanero.com/ Miguel

    The good tutorial well esplicados Steps

  • Ace

    i cant even do the forward warp on the photo.

  • Linnea

    Great tutorial, don’t mind the haters! ;) as a beginner i found this tutorial very helpful, i learned alot! descriptions were easy and good pictures too!

  • Nelson

    Nice job! For the politically correct: This is a tutorial, that’s all. It shows the possibilities. How far to go depends on each one. A beauty magazine would probably like to get the final version while an ad for nursery home depicting a nurse caring for a patient may choose something in between. Regards

  • Mike

    Why do people complain about it being unrealistic, OF COURSE it’s unrealistic, it’s photoshop for crying out loud. Anything you practically do in photoshop is taking the true “beauty” out of anything, be it a car the sky (removing a plane ect…). Great tutorial.

  • http://www.easytechtips.net parvez

    Thank you so much. I like the final image.

  • http://twitter.com/katgaskin Katherine Gaskin

    This is such a great tutorial! Thanks for the insight. I didn’t realize how much my knowledge of make-up application could transfer to Photoshop.

  • Kylie

    The result is mediocre. Some of the warping resulted in a blurry effect which looks unnatural. The makeup application is also quite average. FYI, lots of women apply makeup in under 15 minutes.

  • http://www.facebook.com/santhosh.sukumaran.52 Santhosh Sukumaran

    Very good and very helpfull tutorial Thankyou

  • Asela

    nice awesome thanks to you