How can I create an Andrzej Dragan-style portrait, and why does it work better on lined faces?
Asked 4/9/2012
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I want to achieve portraits similar to Andrzej Dragan’s style. I’ve tried several tutorials, but the results never look convincing. What are the main steps I should focus on in both shooting and post-processing to get closer to this look? Also, why does this effect tend to work better on faces with wrinkles, creases, or strong texture than on smoother faces?
Originally by Photography Stack Exchange contributor. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0
Photography Stack Exchange contributor
14y ago
2 Answers
13
The thing missing from the tutorials you been reading is probably in the preparation of the original image, and the missing ingredient, years of experience and practice!
Dragan could be the most imitated style on the internet with the possible exception of Dave Hill. Dave gets paid a lot of money for the shoots he does, despite the plethora of tutorials online promising the Dave Hill look. It seems there's no substitute for the real thing.
This is not to say you shouldn't try, just that you shouldn't expect an online tutorial to reproduce the results of a seasoned pro.
To get you started along the road to perfecting the look you want I would suggest the following:
Start with the correct subject. You ask "why does this effect not work really well with faces that do not have wrinkles/creases?" — this is due to the fact you can' create contrast without some sort of detail, or you'll just wind up with a huge amount of noise as there's nothing else there to enhance in a perfectly smooth face! This brings me on to the next point:
Lighting. You need sculpted light to give you something to work with in the image. Hard lighting and strongly directional light will get you close. A high-resolution image which is properly exposed, sharp and in focus will make everything easier.
Experiment and understand the relationship between global contrast and local contrast and techniques to manipulate both of these.
Originally by user1375. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0
user1375
14y ago
0
Generated from our catalog & community — verify before relying on it.
A convincing “Dragan-style” portrait starts more with the subject and lighting than with Photoshop alone.
Key points from the community answers:
- Choose the right subject: the look suits faces with strong character, texture, wrinkles, scars, stubble, and defined bone structure. Smooth skin gives the effect less to emphasize.
- Use dramatic lighting: low-key, directional light that carves out facial structure and texture works best.
- Aim for strong local contrast and detail: the style depends on emphasizing micro-contrast, skin texture, and tonal separation.
- Keep tones controlled: muted or desaturated color and careful dodging/burning help shape the face.
- Expect practice: this is one of those styles where experience in lighting, retouching, and restraint matters more than any single tutorial recipe.
Why it works better on wrinkled or textured faces: the effect exaggerates existing detail. Wrinkles, pores, beard, and facial lines create contrast and texture that can be enhanced. On youthful or very smooth skin, pushing the same processing often just makes skin look unnatural or overprocessed rather than dramatic.
So the major steps are: pick a textured subject, light for shape and texture, then enhance local contrast and sculpt the tones in post without overdoing it.
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