Thank you! 😊 I usually get it as good/even as possible in raw processing, and leave it for Photoshop to do any specific or targeted colour adjustments. (Nothing too over the top in Raw though because it can be difficult to revert any adjustments later on.) Capture One does tend to save me a bit more time in Photoshop these days with the skin colour adjustment option. 🙂
In Capture One, unifying the skin tones is pretty easy. There is a skin tool and it is the #1 reason why I stay on Capture One. You pick a target tone and you got sliders to bring Hue, Saturation and Luminance towards the target.
Thank you so much for this!. Easy to follow. Brilliant!
Thank you so much for your tutorials I love them
Great technique, thank you!
How do you decide your skin tones are "done" in Lightroom and ready to be retouched in Photoshop? I always appreciate your videos 😊
Thank you! 😊
I usually get it as good/even as possible in raw processing, and leave it for Photoshop to do any specific or targeted colour adjustments. (Nothing too over the top in Raw though because it can be difficult to revert any adjustments later on.)
Capture One does tend to save me a bit more time in Photoshop these days with the skin colour adjustment option. 🙂
@@KayleighJune thank you 😊🙏
In Capture One, unifying the skin tones is pretty easy. There is a skin tool and it is the #1 reason why I stay on Capture One. You pick a target tone and you got sliders to bring Hue, Saturation and Luminance towards the target.
I LOVE Capture One for this reason. The skin colour adjustment option is the best! Definitely saves me a bit of time.😁