Academy Panel _hot_ | Retouch

With the Retouch Academy Panel, . The panel will not make creative decisions or do the work for you—it will be there to help you accelerate your workflow by creating the layers and adjustments you need for high‑end retouching.

Released in May 2025, marks the most significant update to the panel in years. This version introduces AI-powered tools and scripts designed to make retouching work faster and easier, while maintaining the professional quality that the RA brand is known for.

Even with a great panel, things can go wrong. Here is how to fix them. retouch academy panel

In the world of professional photo retouching, speed and precision are not just advantages—they are necessities. Whether you are a high-volume e-commerce editor or a high-end beauty photographer preparing a cover shot, the tools you use define the ceiling of your creativity. For years, Adobe Photoshop has been the industry standard, but its native tools often require dozens of steps to achieve a single effect.

The panel layout is meticulously organized into logical sections that mimic the chronological steps of a professional retouching workflow. 1. Advanced Frequency Separation (FS) With the Retouch Academy Panel,

The panels are a premium investment, but the pricing model offers flexibility.

Who understand the theory of techniques like Dodge & Burn but want to eliminate the confusing technical setup in Photoshop. Final Thoughts: Artistry Over Automation In the world of professional photo retouching, speed

To help you get the most out of your post-production setup, tell me: Which are you currently running?

Groups tools by workflow stages, moving logically from correction to final grading. Target Audience and Skill Levels

The hallmark of modern skin retouching is the separation of texture (high frequency) from color and tone (low frequency). Setting this up manually involves a complex dance of Gaussian blurs, image calculations, and blending modes. A dedicated panel streamlines this, often offering options for different radii (e.g., 8-bit vs. 16-bit workflows) and preserving the original pixel data on separate layers. This ensures that when smoothing color transitions or fixing texture issues, the retoucher is working on isolated data sets, ensuring a clean, professional result that avoids the dreaded "plastic" look.