How to Use Airbrushing in Photoshop for Face
Dec 3, 2009 Digital Images, Photoshop, Tips & Tricks, Tutorials, Z-All
Yesterday, i am doing some thing with a picture, because i have a picture but picture was rough. I am trying to make better with any photoshop tutorial.
Then i have found a link and i have found a way to make picture smooth in photoshop, that is simple easy and superb.
This tutorial is really awesome and this is so simple solution in photoshop for any old picture.
1.
With your photo open in Photoshop, duplicate the current layer by clicking Layer > Duplicate. You can also duplicate your layer by simply clicking on the layer thumbnail in your layers palette, then drag-and-drop it onto the “new layer” icon located in the toolbar (Figure 1).

2.
Click Filter > Blur > Gaussian Blur. The blur strength will vary by photo size since it is based on pixel count, so no uniform number will produce the same results on every photo. The goal is to blur the duplicate layer as much as possible while still retaining identifiable features (mouth, eyes, etc). Work the slider and try to get the blur as close as you can to Figure 2. Click OK and name the layer “airbrush” on your layers palette.

3.
We are now going to apply a layer mask to hide the blurred layer so that we can mask out which parts of the face we want to airbrush. While holding down the ALT key, click on the Add Layer Mask icon in your layers palette toolbar (Figure 3).

4.
This is where some common sense and an eye for detail goes a long way. If you’re not careful with how liberally you apply your airbrushing, you can easily take your photo down the trail of airbrushing horrors.
Click on your brush tool (keyboard shortcut : B), then click on the foreground/background color reversal arrow to make your foreground color white. With a very soft brush (one with a hardness of 0%) and an opacity level of around 10% to start, begin to brush around the face to bring out the airbrushed layer. Take care not to brush over the eyes, mouth, jawline/edges of the face, and the outline of the nose. You’ll want to retain these as it would look incredibly unnatural to have gaussian-blurred eyes and teeth. When finished, your layer mask should look something similar to the one seen in Figure 4.

If you think you have gone a bit too far, instead of switching the brush color back to black and deleting your previous brush strokes, try just lowering the opacity for the airbrush layer. It’s much simpler this way and you can bump it back up later if needed.
While you may impress people by making a 60 year-old-woman look 25, that goes into the realm of unnatural manipulation, not photo enhancement. The goal is to remove some common aging and skin imperfections while still keeping the photo representative of the actual model.

There you have it! An airbrushed portrait that simply looks enhanced, not altered. Surprise a few clients by adding this finishing touch to your workflow and watch them say what a wonderful job you did.
Tags: airbrushing, how to, Photoshop, tutorial
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December 3rd, 2009 at 10:39 am
[...] Read the original here: How to Use Airbrushing in Photoshop for Face | Voooz.com [...]
December 3rd, 2009 at 4:18 pm
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December 23rd, 2009 at 11:30 pm
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December 25th, 2009 at 8:30 pm
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December 27th, 2009 at 8:13 pm
That is some inspirational stuff. Never knew that opinions could be this varied. Thanks for all the enthusiasm to offer such helpful information here.
December 30th, 2009 at 11:15 pm
The instructions given through this tutorial is very helpful. This is absolutely very inspiring stuff. Keep posting. Thanks.
January 7th, 2010 at 2:48 pm
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January 20th, 2010 at 2:49 am
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February 3rd, 2010 at 3:35 pm
Interesting article. Were did you got all the information from…Great articles