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Portraitpro 21 review
Portraitpro 21 review










  1. #PORTRAITPRO 21 REVIEW SKIN#
  2. #PORTRAITPRO 21 REVIEW SOFTWARE#
  3. #PORTRAITPRO 21 REVIEW TRIAL#
  4. #PORTRAITPRO 21 REVIEW FREE#

And you can also do more advanced retouching like changing eye color and adding in reflections (such as a ringlight, as seen in the example photo above). You can do standard adjustments like whitening eyes, brightening irises, or darkening pupils. The Eye section is also fantastic because so much of the focus of a portrait is on your subject’s eyes! This example shows a ringlight that’s been added. It also includes some sliders for coloring adjustments, such as smoky eyes and pout color. And then you can adjust how it hits each part of the face. You can click and drag where you want the direction of the light to hit your subject.

#PORTRAITPRO 21 REVIEW SKIN#

The Skin Lighting and Coloring section is fantastic for adjusting lighting when it wasn’t just right during the shoot.

#PORTRAITPRO 21 REVIEW SOFTWARE#

The photo editing software also has batch processing capabilities.Īs you slide to either end of the slider track, you can see the changes made on the photo. You can do things like slimming the face, adding volume to the hair, opening up the eyes a bit, or lengthening the neck. The Face Sculpt section is perfect for small tweaks to facial features that your client may be self-conscious about. While you can delete presets and assign them to certain type of faces, it doesn’t show an option for creating your own. With so many adjustment possibilities, it is a bit overwhelming at first. This includes things like lighting, eyes, skin smoothing, hair, layers (where you can add a new background). You have options of presets that apply to the entire photo style, some that are for different styles of face editing, and some that are specifically for hair, eyes, make-up, face sculpt.īeyond the presets, you can manually adjust anything. These presets are categorized, depending on what they adjust. There are presets built into the program that are for different styles of editing. I was impressed with the variety of adjustments you can make! Once face features are selected and automatically edited, you can adjust all edits manually. But I found that the automatic selection is actually quite accurate.

portraitpro 21 review

You also have the option of turning off the automatic face detection and doing the adjustments manually. In this way, PortraitPro 17 saves you loads of time! You don’t have to worry about selecting, masking, or brushing a selection to select each facial feature.

portraitpro 21 review

You can then tweak these to your preference. The program uses the facial features it detected as a guide. Once the face is detected, it will apply an automatic edit to the subject. If the program isn’t certain about whether it’s a female, male, girl, or boy, it will prompt you to choose. Upon opening the photo, PortraitPro 17 will automatically use face detection to find the eyes, nose, lips, and edges of the face. When you first open PortraitPro 17, you’ll be able to open a photo to work with. Before photo shows points detected by the automatic face-detection technology. This is important to be aware of when choosing which version of PortraitPro 17 to work with. If you’re shooting professionally then you’re most likely shooting in RAW. One restriction that you instantly see when working with the Basic version is that it only works with JPEG or TIFF file types. The others can work with RAW.

#PORTRAITPRO 21 REVIEW TRIAL#

Please disregard this watermark since it’s not there beyond the trial period. Since it’s a trial version, you’ll see a watermark on the “After” photos. Please note that, as portraits are not my usual genre and this is my first foray into using PortraitPro 17, I used a trial version for this review. Setup is simple and straightforward.įor the sake of this review, we’ll be working with the basic version as a stand-alone program.

portraitpro 21 review

#PORTRAITPRO 21 REVIEW FREE#

The free trial gives you access to the Basic version, so you can get a clear idea of your needs then. Whether it’s worth it for you will depend on your editing process. The Studio and Studio Max versions can be used as plug-ins through Lightroom or Photoshop, but they come at a higher purchase price. This means it doesn’t communicate directly with other programs like Lightroom or Photoshop. There are three levels of PortraitPro 17 – Basic, Studio, Studio Max.












Portraitpro 21 review