Learn how to use a variety of professional retouching techniques such as various healing brushes, the liquify tool, adjustment layers and more in order to take off 10 years from a male photographic subject.
Male Photo Retouching
Traditionally Tutorials have always focused on how to retouch female photographs. This is linked with the traditional media conventions of women as sex symbols, who are regrettably objectified as part of daily media. Whilst these conventions are applying more and more to men (particularly celebrities), a man can show imperfections and get away with it far more. For example, wrinkles can ’show character’, gray hair can look sexy – things that would be impossible for a woman to be perceived as.
Whilst I’m against retouching in general, it can be fun to play around with the techniques, as it’s a great way to practice up on your photo manipulation techniques. For the purpose of this Tutorial I’m going to demonstrate how to take roughly 10 years off of a middle-aged male subject. I think that the fact I’m using a male subject rather than a female one means that I can expose a few different styles than are exposed by most Photoshop Tutorials on the subject. Enjoy!
Step 1
Open up this image of a male photographic subject: Man Photograph
Resize your canvas to 600px.

Step 3
Now go to Filter > Liquify and use the ‘pucker tool’ in order to bring in areas of the face, head and neck. Continually adjust your brush size to what is most relevant. In this example I brought in the cheeks and neck of my subject in order to make him appear very slightly slimmer. I also used the pucker tool on his nose, to make it appear less hooked (it wasn’t overly hooked, but I performed a slight improvement).

Step 4
Zoom into your subjects teeth, and then use your clone stamp tool set to a very small size, and clone areas of your teeth, to make them rounder and fill in gaps where teeth appear jagged.
The below image shows the before and after images of the man’s teeth:

Step 5
Now use your dodge/burn tools to accentuate the shadows and highlights of your image. As well as giving more impact through this technique, you should also use your dodge/burn tools to give more definition to your man’s face.
This particular subject doesn’t have a very well defined jaw, so I used the burn tool to add definition to his jaw line. I also used the dodge tool to give more of a healthy glow to his cheeks, as well as reducing the darkness under his eyes:

Step 6
I now use my dodge tool on the subject’s eyes and teeth. Particularly on the eyes this tool should give them much more intensity.

Step 7
Now go to your adjustments window and apply a levels adjustment layer. Apply the settings shown below:

Step 8
Now apply a vibrance adjustment layer (settings below):

Step 9
Now apply a color balance adjustment layers (settings below):

And We’re Done!
It’s great that you encourage use of dodge and burn over the horrendously overused quick-fix blur methods. Bravo! The internet needs more of this.
Danny
thank your visit. Your website very nice. I like it.
Thank you, I’d be happy to write a couple of tutorials for your site if you’d be interested in a guest contributor?
Danny
I am very happy to receive your requests. You wanted to write in my blog or send mail for me.