The quiet work behind a clean frame
A body of editorial retouching done the slow way — one honest pass over skin, colour, and light, with nothing pushed past what the frame already held.
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A four-look editorial shot over one afternoon, delivered as a cohesive set. The direction was restraint: keep the skin reading as skin, hold the warmth in the light, and let the retouch disappear. No re-lighting, no liquify theatre — just a careful, deliberate pass that a reader would never catch and an art director would.
Raw → Colour → Retouching → Final
Raw
Straight off the card — flat, cool, untouched.
The best retouch is the one the reader never notices and the client never has to defend.
Named on the frame, the fixes look obvious. In practice each one is a judgement call about how far is too far — the line between correcting a distraction and rebuilding a face.
Most of the hours here go where no one looks: the transition from cheek to jaw, the way a highlight rolls off rather than clips, the single warm cast pulled out of a mixed-light room. It is unglamorous, precise work, and it is the whole job.
Have a set that needs this kind of care?
Tell me what you shot and what it is for. I will tell you honestly whether it needs a light pass or a full one.