Frequency separation

Frequency separation allows you to retouch texture and tone/color independently for powerful portrait retouching.

Before
After
Before and after retouch on high and low frequency layers.

Frequency Separation

Although the term frequency separation is initially intimidating, the concept is straightforward. By automatically separating your image color/tone and texture into separate low and high frequency layers, respectively, you'll be able to retouch color/tone and texture independently.

To apply frequency separation:
  1. From the Filters panel, choose Frequency Separation.
  2. Drag on either high or low pass preview panes to set the Radius (or use the context toolbar); this sets the balance between texture and tone. Set the value so the image's Low Frequency preview blends image color and tone but without losing major features within it.
  3. (Optional) From the dialog, choose a Method to blur the low frequency layer:
    • Gaussian (Default): this offers a smooth blur using a weighted average.
    • Bilateral: this blurs while retaining areas of high contrast at image edges. Use the Tolerance slider with this blur to control how much major features are preserved when applying subsequent brush strokes.
    • Median: this blurs by broadening color regions; it retains edges better than Gaussian blur.
To retouch color or tone:
  1. From the Layers panel, select the Low Frequency layer.
  2. Apply retouch tools to the layer as appropriate.
To retouch textures:
  1. From the Layers panel, select the High Frequency layer.
  2. Apply retouch tools to the layer as appropriate.

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