John - you make an interesting observation and to some extent, I see your point. While I see the processing I did resulted in more of a portrait look, I'm intrigued at what point the "inner innocence" got lost in the PP work. I virtually always throw out my in-process files when I do a critique on the image, so I had to rebuild my edits from scratch, so the final product will be close, but not an exact match to my original posting. Let me walk through each step I did to see if you can help me see where this transformation took place.
Raj - if you wish me to take down any of my edits. please let me know.
The best way to see the changes from edit to edit is to open the first image in Lightbox and to use the arrows to scroll through each successive change.
Step 0 - This is Raj's original posting. The starting point. I find it is too dark and has a significant warm colour cast.
Step 1 Correct the colour cast
Step 2 - Brighten up the image
Step 3 I find that the first two steps in my edit reintroduced a bit too much warmth into the skin tones, so I desaturated the whole image slightly.
Step 4 I find that the lighting in the image and the impact of the edits really bring out some of the blemishes and skin issues with this subject, so I did a fairly heavy-handed cleanup of moles and other minor skin issues.
Step 5 Use of Imaginomic Portrait plugin to clean up the harsh look of the skin. This plugin does a wonderful job in softening the skin of girls and women. The reason I used it here is that I found that the lighting and edits resulted in skin that is just to textured for someone this young.
Step 6 Crop. As I mentioned in my original post, I find that the image needs a minor crop on the bottom to remove some extraneous materials below the chin and a heavy crop on the left to get rid of the material that does not contribute to the image. When I did my original edit, this was actually one of my first steps.
The net effect of the crop is that the the subject appears to be a lot larger so some of the colour / tone and texture issues really come out when the shot is cropped.
Step 7 In process sharpening, reducing reds in the white part of the eye and cleaning up the lips. This is something I wrote about in my original post, but didn't do to the image. I'm a bit limited to what I wanted to attempt, given the relatively small size / format of the image that Raj posted. Nicely said, it is too easy to get unwanted artifacts at the level I would normally edit the eyes and the lips.
Just for continuity, here is Raj's original, cropped to final edit format.
Thoughts or comments?