Originally Posted by
GrumpyDiver
Okay - good; you are working in Photoshop, let me walk you through my workflow on this one. I am using Photoshop CC.
If you are shooting in camera RAW, it will be easier, but I only had access to your images as a jpeg, so the white balance would have been "baked" into the image.
First of all, what strikes me right away is that the image looks like it was taken using daylight setting under tungsten light. That heavy orange cast is typically seen when this is done. Even if you are shooting RAW, if this is how your camera is set up, the data in the sidecar file will open the file this way in Adobe Camera RAW (ACR) on import.
I did all of my adjustment in ACR:
1. Correct the white balance; I used the eyedropper tool on something that I thought was likely white in the image to set the white balance. All of the framed images in the background look like they had a white matt, so I picked one of these to set my white balance. If they are not white, I will have introduced a slightly incorrect bias into things.
2. The next step is to set the black point and white point. Not all images have parts that are pure black and pure white, but this one seems to and when I look at the histogram, the range seems to be a bit compressed, so I opened things up by taking the black slider to the left to a point just about where you start to block the shadow details (in this image it was already there) and move the white slider to the right to just before you start to blow out highlights. This will give the image more "pop".
3. I will normally also play with the clarity and vibrance and bring them up a bit; never more than 20 or 25 when there is a person in the image. I did not do this in this shot.
4. At this point, I took the saturation slider and moved it to the left until the woman's skin looked correct.
After that I opened in Photoshop and really did nothing else. If it were my image, I probably would have done a slight vignette at this point and a bit more PP work.
I hope that this helps.