Originally Posted by
GrumpyDiver
Kim - let me throw a suggestion at you. All of the "issues" that you and I have tried to correct using PP are related to things that could have been fixed "in camera". Proper lighting, posing, cleaning up stray hair, positioning of the subject and background, etc.
I find lighting and makeup to be the most critical of these elements to get right. In portraiture we are attempting to sculpt the face and the way that the makeup defines cheek bones, the eyes, the lips. This should be complemented by how the lighting falls on the subject, especially the face, and casts shadows to complement the facial features, often already accentuated by well applied makeup.
I suspect that a number of issues in this shot (strange shadows in and beneath the eyes, below the lips and on the camera right side of the face and neck) could have been avoided by using a fill light that came from camera left and below (I would start 1-stop below ambient metered and see how that goes (drama vs softness) and try moving in 1/3 stop increments to see how I like the look.
I would also probably have asked the subject to swing her hair behind her head on the camera right side as well. Shooting more from the camera left side, rather than straight on would have been worth trying too, if you do want the hair in the image. The problem I have with long hair is arranging it in such a way that it does not look strange in the way it falls on the face and / or the neck.