Make a striking high-key portrait
A high-key portrait tends to be lit from the front, creating a relatively shadow-free image. The over-exposed highlights help to smooth out skin tones and dial down distracting details so that key features such as the eyes and lips stand out more dramatically.
The challenge with high-key portrait photography comes when deliberately over-exposing a shot to produce bright flat skin tones while preserving shadows and midtones on the eyes and lips.
It’s all too easy to go too far and lose valuable detail throughout the entire tonal range, especially if you shoot in compressed JPEG format, rather than raw.
So here, we’ll show you how to unleash the power of the Photoshop Elements Adobe Camera Raw (ACR) editor to increase the brightness of a correctly exposed portrait and create the flat wash of bright highlights associated with high-key photography.
Because raw files have more tonal information than a JPEG, you can reveal as much highlight detail as you like post-shoot, while giving the tones of key features such as the eyes and lips an independent tweak to produce a portrait that has far more punch.
Because our subject is blonde, we’ll demonstrate how to use Adobe Camera Raw’s Exposure slider to blow out the highlights in her hair so that it merges with the white studio background, creating a clean and delicate high-key look that flatters her feminine features.
We’ll also show you how to tone down the image’s colour intensity to create a delicate palette that complements the overall effect.
Click here to see step-by-step how to make a high-key portrait with your raw files.
For more on editing raw files, check out the ongoing Raw Tuesday series over on our sister site, Digital Camera World.
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This entry was posted on Saturday, August 18th, 2012 at 8:00 am and is filed under Photo Editing, Photoshop Elements. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can skip to the end and leave a comment. Pinging is currently not allowed.
Tags: photoshop tutorials, portraits
jmeyer | Photo Editing, Photoshop Elements | 18/08/2012 08:00am
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