02-16-2011, 06:42 PM
There is no intensity slider for skin as the selected area defines normal skin. If you want to touchup some area more then use the touch-up brush. If you want to reveal an area, use the restore brush. Both of these have opacity sliders. In areas where there is not a strong difference between skin and not skin, then this is a tough problem, however here are some tips:
+ Use a smaller brush and be accurate.
+ Get close to the edge of the skin with the extend brush, then feather the result in with a low opacity touch-up brush.
N.B. The two pairs of brushes: touchup/restore and extend/cut back both work on the same mask. The extend brush extends the skin area at it's default amount (which is set by the sliders and corresponds to 'normal' skin). The touch-up brush pushes up the skin slider values to maximum in the brushed area. The cutback/restore brushes both do a similar thing, but restore is feathered and is can be used for gently revealing original skin, while cutback is for removing larger areas that the automatic skin finder has mistakenly identified as skin.
Tony
+ Use a smaller brush and be accurate.
+ Get close to the edge of the skin with the extend brush, then feather the result in with a low opacity touch-up brush.
N.B. The two pairs of brushes: touchup/restore and extend/cut back both work on the same mask. The extend brush extends the skin area at it's default amount (which is set by the sliders and corresponds to 'normal' skin). The touch-up brush pushes up the skin slider values to maximum in the brushed area. The cutback/restore brushes both do a similar thing, but restore is feathered and is can be used for gently revealing original skin, while cutback is for removing larger areas that the automatic skin finder has mistakenly identified as skin.
Tony