20:59 good explanation. I would really like to see natural looking color change to the face. Rosacea is difficult to correct and look natural. I use on1 2024.1. Thanks. Also a grip of two or more, with different skin hew , how to make them all look more tanned.
Thank you for the video ! I have two questions regarding the masking in Portrait AI. - Can you refine , and if so how , the original mask it created for you ? Sometimes it does a great job creating a portrait mask sometimes a little less. I would want to refine what it created . - After Portrait AI creates the initial mask , you can delete and add again (after I mess something up ). In 2024 as I go and add it seems to want to create a circle only, not the original outlined mask . What am I doing wrong ? Keep the ON1 videos coming !
Yes, there is a refine brush in ON1, so you can use it to enhance your masks. You may want to check out my video "Discover the Magic of ON1 Photo RAW 2024 Masks to see if that helps clarify things for you.
Thanks for this portrait walk through. Right now people can get a FREE copy of ON1 Effects, the standard alone software and plug in until January 31, 2024. Looking forward to trying this out.
Thank you for your helpful video. I seem to be finding that when smoothing the face, the eyes get much softer, even blurry looking. To correct this, I've been using the masking brush on the eyes, using the overlay as a guide. I thought the "Detail" slider might be the answer, but that doesn't seem to correct the eyes. Is there an alternative to having to add or subtract to the masking in order to sharpen (or at least not lose the sharpness in) the eyes? Thanks again!
Thanks, Frank. I think the answer is going to be selective masking for best results. Different areas of the body require different attention to detail. I know that's not the answer you hoped to get, but it's what I recommend.
Much appreciated, thank's
Glad it was helpful!
20:59 good explanation. I would really like to see natural looking color change to the face. Rosacea is difficult to correct and look natural. I use on1 2024.1. Thanks. Also a grip of two or more, with different skin hew , how to make them all look more tanned.
Great suggestion!
Thank you for the video !
I have two questions regarding the masking in Portrait AI.
- Can you refine , and if so how , the original mask it created for you ? Sometimes it does a great job creating a portrait mask sometimes a little less. I would want to refine what it created .
- After Portrait AI creates the initial mask , you can delete and add again (after I mess something up ). In 2024 as I go and add it seems to want to create a circle only, not the original outlined mask . What am I doing wrong ?
Keep the ON1 videos coming !
Yes, there is a refine brush in ON1, so you can use it to enhance your masks. You may want to check out my video "Discover the Magic of ON1 Photo RAW 2024 Masks to see if that helps clarify things for you.
Great video. Is there a way to do batch processing?
Yes, but I haven't really explored that very much. Could be a good idea for a future video.
Thanks for this portrait walk through. Right now people can get a FREE copy of ON1 Effects, the standard alone software and plug in until January 31, 2024. Looking forward to trying this out.
KelbyOne announced that its members get the 2023.5 version of ON1 for free. May be worth a look for some folks, too.
Thank you William, healing brush tool isn’t showing on my Mac, do I need to enable in some other menus?
You can use the keyboard shortcut "Q" to bring it up when making a Local Adjustment or in the Develop module.
@@WilliamBeemPhotography Thank you
Thank you for your helpful video.
I seem to be finding that when smoothing the face, the eyes get much softer, even blurry looking. To correct this, I've been using the masking brush on the eyes, using the overlay as a guide. I thought the "Detail" slider might be the answer, but that doesn't seem to correct the eyes. Is there an alternative to having to add or subtract to the masking in order to sharpen (or at least not lose the sharpness in) the eyes? Thanks again!
Thanks, Frank. I think the answer is going to be selective masking for best results. Different areas of the body require different attention to detail. I know that's not the answer you hoped to get, but it's what I recommend.
Thank you. It works!
Very good 😊
Thank you!
Why don’t you use the eye refiner ? You click on it but don’t use it. Because of that the whitening of her eyes don’t match.
There's always more than one way to do a job.