| Re: Kind of Tests Do They Require For Jr. Retouche At a fashion/beauty retouchers, you'll probably be given an image which will test your abilities in the main areas they are concerned with.
So expect to clean up skin (no blurring/dust & scratches/smudging!) balance skin tones (look out for red ears and fingertips), tidy eyebrows, reduce veins in eyes and enhance whites and iris colour if necessary. Clean teeth and whiten gently, remove nose hairs, Clean up any cross-hairs in the hair, maybe add some shine to hair.
Clothes may need to be tidied up - creases reduced, fit improved (practice subtle warping), colour correction on clothes (look out for colour bias in whites/neutrals/blacks), metal clean and shiny on jewellery/buttons etc, moire removed perhaps (best done by lightening/darkening and amending colour so as not to ruin texture of fabric).
Body shape may need warping (don't go crazy! set the warp brush to low values and warp slowly bit by bit to minimize distortion of texture), maybe shape waist, chest and legs, knobbly fingers and feet smoothed and tendons knocked back.
Don't forget a thorough check for dirt all over the image, dirty studio floors, scuffed shoes, lipstick on teeth, threads hanging off clothes, anything distracting which detracts from the image should be looked at.
You may be given a file to match for colour, otherwise I would advise that you don't go crazy with colour and focus on the physical retouching.
They will be looking at your work for technique, potential, ability to follow a brief and sympathetic eye for colour.
So a great natural skin job will be more favourable than extreme colour effects.
Don't be afraid to ask questions about what is expected of you but don't pester busy retouchers too much or you risk seeming annoying!
You shouldn't be expected to be able to do everything immediately if you're looking for a junior role. They're looking for someone they can mould into shape. Have a go at every part of the retouch, often you don't know how to do something until you give it a go. If you're really not happy with a part of the retouch, let them know when you hand over the file (but show you've given it your best shot, don't just ignore the difficult bits).
Importantly, get the job done as best you can WITHIN THE ALLOTED TIME. If you're given 3 hours at their office to retouch it, don't spend 2.5 hours on skin and rush the rest, divide your time equally. If you retouch the image at home, make sure you deliver the job when agreed, if you're late on the test job, you'll look like your unreliable.
Most of all, be positive and enthusiastic, show a genuine interest in their work, don't ignore advice on technique, or stray from a brief, and be the kind of person they're going to want to spend 8 hours a day with!
Don't expect to be paid, I've never heard of it, but be very grateful if they do!
GOOD LUCK! |