runnah said:
When in doubt throw the color out!
I have to agree...when in doubt, throw the color out.
There *is* a way to fix this....I used to know how to do it too, back when I made this kind of mistake a decade ago with my cranky old Nikon D1 and its uber-narrow dynamic range....something like making a highlight mask, feathering the selection by 2 or 3 pixels, inverting the selection, then using the curves or something...I cannot recall exactly...I asked a buddy of mine who worked for our region's largest daily newspaper as a photo desk Photoshop and pre-press "toning" guy...he was in charge of fixing up ALL of the images that were going to be run in the paper, usually about 35 to 45 images every night, and he also had to fix up "submissions" from all manner of bungling folks, and he taught me how to fix such overexposed skintones.
I agree--her face and arm have been blown out...but in B&W it can be made to look pretty close to acceptable.