Hi Monique, I think this will work for you ...
A Channel Mixer adjustment layer, with these values:
Red 0, +101, 0, -2
Green 0, +97, 0, +1
Blue 0, +95, 0, -2
Make sure you get the numbers in exactly the right order.
Please ignore all phones. Phone screens are deliberately manufactured too bright. ONLY assess your editing screen based on pro lab prints.
https://www.damiensymonds.net/2010/09/all-about-monitor-calibration.html
Do your prints match your screen exactly? Because the photo you posted above is grossly dark, and I went to your page, and almost ALL the photos are grossly dark. I very much fear your screen is badly too bright.
She's either pulling your leg, or not telling you the whole story. Either way, it's BS.
The very nature of cropping is deleting pixels. That's why we do it. Cropping (removing parts of a photo) has been part of printing for as long as photography has existed. It's completely normal, and absolutely nothing to stress about.
Maybe you could show me some screenshots to explain your concerns? A screenshot before cropping, and after.
Hi @Chelsea.corrine, this should answer your question: https://www.damiensymonds.net/2014/03/how-aggressively-can-i-crop.html
I'm obliged to ask - do you print many photos? On either canvas or normal photo paper?
Thanks.
So now if you're game you can try cloning over that remaining white area on her top eyelid. I'd suggest using a different blank layer for it. Work with a low opacity brush. It'll be darn difficult.
Oh, sorry! No, delete that layer. Use a blank pixel layer ABOVE the channel mixer layer, for the cloning.
And make sure to look at the Options Bar when you choose your Clone Tool, and make sure it's set to "Sample: Current & below".
What kind of adjustment do you want to make to the highlights, exactly?
Are you sure about that? Make sure you remember to Shift-click the mask thumbnail to temporarily turn the mask off and on. You'll probably find that your mask is actually working.