FreeDownload Imagenomic Portraiture 3 Photoshop Plugin full version for lifetime usage WinRAR compress file. imagenomic portraiture 3 you can integrate into adobe photoshop cc version and then you can easily use it for your editing purpose. You Can Also Download Alien Skin Exposure X4 Photoshop Plug-in.
Imagenomic Portraiture 3 Photoshop Plugin has available more useful features for your photography or image quality improvement. Portraiture 3 some useful features name skin smooth, remove and clear texture, such as hair, eyebrows, eyelashes, brightness, contrast, and more. these all features can be applied to your photography or images also within just one click.
One of the important features included in the Imagenomic Portraiture 3 Photoshop Plugin is the automatic mask builder that helps you identify the skin color that you can customize if you want to customize it.
While Dynamic Skin Softener (DSS) is a good product and it can be dialed in to get similar softening results, I found the advanced eye dropper and some of the presets in Portraiture to be a big step ahead of what Dynamic Skin Softener can do.
To see what I mean, compare the screen shot above to the shot below (taken from Mac, but both work the same way) and notice the mask preview on the right. By sampling various spots on the image I was able to isolate most of the skin with minimal impact on the rest of the image. The remainder can usually be ignored or masked off with a quick black brush stroke when you return Photoshop, but I usually just leave it alone and most of the time I can isolate my selection to just the skin very quickly.
Seasoned DSS veterans like me can use both products equally effective, but I still have found that the default settings in Portraiture are better to my personal preferences. This coupled with the fact that I can make fast adjustments in one pass means I get a a time advantage in my image processing my workflow that make it worth it the switch.
Both products create good results, but I find that DSS is a little more aggressive by default. Both products allow for adjustments so this can be addressed in the user-interface or by simply changing the opacity of the skin softening layer, but I find the defaults in Portraiture more suitable to my tastes.
This example for Portraiture uses color enhancements, but this can easily be disabled by clicking off in the Enhancements panel shown in the screen shots above. I used it because it saved me a processing step, but others may wish to do that in Photoshop or Lightroom directly.
My advice here is do what you like. You are the photographer, and your work is a reflection of you so do what you like the most. Top Photographers like Jill Greenberg have made a name for themselves by doing unrealistic skin enhancements, so while some people might complain about your level of skin softening (as they do with Jill) others will call it your style (as they also do with Jill).
Once I had my skin softening done then I selected the teeth using the quick selection tool, created a Hue/Saturation adjustment layer to adjust the teeth color. I removed a little saturation from the yellow channel and added a little lightness on the master channel. I learned this trick and others I used on this photo from Scott Kelby. You can read a bunch of tricks like these in his book The Adobe Photoshop CS5 Book for Digital Photographers.
My last steps to this image were a little dodge and burn on the eyes, a visit to the warp tool to narrow the face, and I used the digital reflector filter in Color Efex to add some additional light and color to the face. I sharpened the final product with Sharpener Pro.
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This guy really knows what he is doing! I bought this plug in and can not believe how much time it saves and how great the portrait photos turn out. Also, the instruction video is superb. If nothing else, try the free trial version first.
Yes, I have. I'll be posting the results in an article soon.
I still prefer portraiture, but for those getting started they may find some of the other things that Portrait Professional can do to be a welcome addition to their workflow.
A good analogy is that Portrait Professional is much like P mode on the camera - it helps to do a lot of things automatically, which is great when you get started. Once you know what you are doing you rarely go there and find other modes like Aperture Priority to be superior. Portraiture is part of a more advanced workflow like Aperture Priority on our cameras.
Hey,
I just use Imagenomic Portraiture.. it's relly wonderfull..
But i have a question: after using the imagenomic on any picture, scales are seen on them how can i remove this lines..
thanks a lot
I dont have a huge experience (just for home use) with portraits but I have always some demands before playing with PS
1. Fair quality, high resolution source
2. Basic knowledge about high pass filter / gaussian blur / masking
3. A little bit of spare time (15 minutes at least)
Ad.1 - If you want to achieve great adv look i think except good tech quality you have to shot with proper preparation f.ex. model should have powdered face to avoid highlight blow-ups and etc
Ad.2 - I've used google a lot, found a lot of tutorials but the most valuable for me was this one from dgrin
Ad.3 - The tutorial was not easy for me so it takes a little bit of time, first portrait also but soon after some jobs i think you can prepare sth like wireframe, your own workflow.
And a small example
ages ago(permalink)
darius, did you use that tutorial to get your effect? It is a great job because you can still see the pores and it looks quite natural. I hate alien plastic-looking skin so I am interested in using your method.
ages ago(permalink)
I learned a great deal from Lynda.com. I found out there that there are many ways to smooth/tone skin. here is a link to one of the many movies on that site. It is worth every penny to join that site.
movielibrary.lynda.com/html/modPage.asp?ID=566
ages ago(permalink)
Although you have good suggestions danny, I beg to differ and dodge and burn. If they are a professionals they'll probably avoid dodge and burn, since they were just OK tools. If they use them it will be the LAST resort, not the first. There are many other tools and methods far more effective than dodging and burning.
I take that back. If a pro is still stuck in PS 5 or maybe even 6 (you know.... old school), they may still be using dodge and burn. I myself let go of them grudgingly. I was the kind of guy who said: "You can take my dodge and burn, when you pull my PS CD from my cold dead hands."
I have since re-educated myself.
I understand the dodge and burn in CS4 will actually work as you would expect the tools to work, although I haven't tried any of the beta versions, so cannot vouch for that personally.
ADDENDUM: I'll add that I do know a few "professionals" that use Dodge and Burn, but they are like me, hardheaded and set in their ways. And although I've tried to show them the light, they still insist on using them.
Originally posted ages ago. (permalink)
Tennessee_Gator (a group admin) edited this topic ages ago.
I use a plugin called Kodak Gem Airbrush Pro. I love how it smooths skin. I use it on a separate layer and lower the opacity for a look that is somewhat close to natural. ;-)
Also, Portraiture is another plugin that is supposed to be great...about twice the price of the Kodak though.
ages ago(permalink)
Well I don't really know much about skin smoothing but as far as I know it's all about lighting. There are some special light sources and umbrellas that make your skin smooth as silk. Check out this guys photostream as an example. For my needs actually a noisereduction plug in works the best :)
ages ago(permalink)
@Tennessee Gator
By Dodge and Burn I didnt mean use the dodge and burn tools, I should have made that clearer. (more the nomenclature of D&B) .Rather the lighten and darken curves layer method, painting with light onto the layer masks, or the soft light 50% grey layer method, painting with black and white with a low opacity brush.
I never use dodge and burn tools themselves as prior to CS4 they are destructive editing tools. I'm not a pro, but have been told form several pros that that is how they do it. I'm not saying everyone does it because degrunging and blur is much faster, and has its place.
ages ago(permalink)
To do it really well, you need a mixture of decent plug-ins (e.g. Imagenomic Noiseware and/or Portraiture) applied on duplicate layers or with masking, and also to spend a lot of time zooming in and out to clear up finer detail with the clone tool.
I think professional retouchers also use their own self-made "textured skin brushes" with which they can paint in detail on cheeks and around eyes much like a woman would apply make-up.
ages ago(permalink)
Take a look at these two tutorials. The Digital Foundation makeup is particularly effective at smoothing without losing texture and definition.
Digital foundation makeup
Digital Facial scrub
ages ago(permalink)
...and I wish beer didn't have calories! :) Just install the latest version of Quicktime and all will be well. If you really can't bring yourself to do this, go my YouTube site and you can see them in low resolution Flash video. (Icky, but usable.)
ages ago(permalink)
I don't like using Quicktime, but I just went to your YouTube page and watched the "eye make up" tutorial. I was very impressed with what you achieved in so short a time. I'll have to watch the whole lot when I've got more time to spare. Thanks for sharing!
ages ago(permalink)
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