Unedited Files, Filters, and Skin Like Hot Butter
Jul 1 2026 | By: Pink Chair Photography, LLC
Once upon a time—several years ago, back before I had the strict boundaries and ironclad policies I have today—I did a collaboration shoot with a wonderful woman. She was full of life, vibrant, and enthusiastic about the project. In a moment of pure, innocent trust, I did something I would never dream of doing now: I handed over the unedited JPG files.
I figured, *Why not? We’re collaborating, it’s a fun project, what’s the worst that could happen?*
A few days later, I got a notification on social media. She had proudly posted her own version of the image and tagged me. Excitedly, I clicked the notification, expecting to see a fun behind-the-scenes vibe or a neat crop.
Instead, I was greeted by a digital disaster.
At her own hand, this mature, beautiful woman had taken a digital smoothing slider and cranked it past 100%, right into the stratosphere. Every single ounce of gorgeous skin texture, character, depth, and shadow had been utterly obliterated. Her face didn't look like skin anymore. It looked like a tub of warm, melted, completely poreless hot butter.
I sat there staring at my screen in a state of mild, comedic shock. I didn’t want to discourage her creative exploration or crush her spirit—she was genuinely thrilled with it. So, I took a deep breath, channeled my inner diplomat, and reached out with a gentle suggestion: *"I love that you’re experimenting with the images! Just do me a huge favor—don't tag me as the editor- it's not my work anymore!"*
And in that exact moment, a permanent studio policy was born.
The Identity Crisis: Why the Tag Matters
The "hot butter" incident perfectly illustrates the ultimate nightmare for any portrait photographer. When an image is released into the wild, the public only sees one thing: The photographer who created the portrait....well ...not exactly - BUT THEY DON'T KNOW THAT. As far as any viewer is concerned, every element of that image is the direct responsibility and vision of the photographer. Some of those viewers may be colleagues, potential clients... You see how this could be disastrous?
They don’t see a secret asterisk. They don't see a disclaimer that says, *"Disclaimer: The photographer captured beautiful, dimensional lighting, but the subject subsequently edited this on a mobile app while sitting on their couch."*
If someone sees an image where the skin looks like a plastic mannequin and your name is attached to it, they naturally assume that is your artistic standard. An artist’s reputation is entirely tied to the finished visual product. Passing out unedited files is essentially handing over your signature before the painting is actually finished.
The Battle Against the "Plastic" Trend
We live in an era dominated by social media beauty filters that have subtly trained us to fear our own faces. We’ve become so accustomed to instant, artificial perfection that it’s easy to accidentally erase the very things that give a portrait life.
From a technical standpoint, slapping a heavy blur or smoothing filter onto a professionally lit portrait doesn't just "fix" skin—it destroys the art. Professional portraiture relies entirely on the deliberate, careful transition between highlights and shadows. That depth is what makes a portrait look three-dimensional and alive.
When a heavy-handed digital filter gets applied, it flattens that entire balance. It takes a timeless, classic image and turns it into a flat, two-dimensional cartoon. Actual retouching that is well done operates behind the scenes.... You're not supposed to see it.
In my world, **texture is character**. Pores, fine lines, and authentic details are what catch the light and transform a simple photograph into a striking piece of art. Real beauty isn't plastic; it has depth.
Why You Don't Cake the Makeup Over the Skincare Routine
Ultimately, asking a photographer for RAW files so you can blast them with a smoothing tool is a lot like spending months on a high-end, 10-step Korean skincare routine to get that perfect, hydrated "glass skin" glow—only to immediately cover it up with a thick layer of matte, cakey drugstore foundation from 2016.
You’re literally suffocating the glow. In professional portraiture, the lighting is the skincare; it’s designed to make skin look luminous, dimensional, and real. When a heavy digital filter gets applied over it, it flattens all that beautiful prep work, leaving you with a matte mask instead of a masterpiece.
It takes a lot of years, a lot of hard work, and a few "hot butter" incidents to realize that protecting your finished work isn't about being difficult or gatekeeping. It’s simply quality control.
When you hire a custom portrait artist, you aren't just paying someone to click a button; you are investing in their specific eye, their understanding of light, and their specialized hand in the final polish. Trusting the process from the initial click to the final print is where the real magic happens—no digital melting required.
Never mind the fact that altering the images you received is a copyright violation... But that's another blog post.