Fujifilm X-Trans IV Film Simulation Recipe: Reggie's Portra.My Fujifilm X100V Kodachrome 64 Film Simulation Recipe.How To Add Film Simulation Recipes To Your Fujifilm Camera.So your Fujifilm X100VI didn’t ship… now what?.Fujicolor Natura 1600 - Fujifilm X-T5 (X-Trans V) Film Simulation Recipe.Top 25 Most Popular Film Simulation Recipes in February 2024.My 5 Favorite Film Simulation Recipes that use Provia.My 5 Favorite Film Simulation Recipes that use Velvia.Kodak Royal Gold 400 - Fujifilm X-Trans IV & X-Trans V Film Simulation Recipe.Summer of ’59 - Fujifilm X-T5 (X-Trans V) FXW App Patron Early-Access Recipe.My 5 Favorite Film Simulation Recipes that use Astia.iF gives Design Award to Fujifilm for Film Simulation Experience.Also it does as you mention kind of go against the ethos of recipes.īut hey, it is technically possible, which is the best kind of possible. It’s a huge pain and i can’t see anyone doing this long term. Needless to say this is a massive ordeal, especially given Raw X studio has no bulk file handling so all images have to be done one at a time and take at least 20 seconds.
Sacrifice a bit of quality and go for 8 bit zip compressed raw for longer term storage, its roughly the same size as a compressed raf.Īll this effort leaves you with a raw equivalent file that has been ran through a film recipe in camera and is now ready for post-processing in capture one. 16 bit tif’s with zip compression are roughly 25% smaller but still three times a raf. 16 bit tif’s are huge so use capture one to render them into something else.
They appear to retain full raw detail but have the recipe applied to them. Once that is done you can import these files into Capture One. This is painfully slow, and cannot be done in bulk. Render out all your Raf’s to 16 bit tif using Raw X Studio. I can’t tell which models support this but the pro 3 and xt-4 definitely do. However starting this generation of x-trans with the x-pro 3 and xt-4 the camera’s can render tif’s internally. This is nice since you can rerun different recipes on your raw files and import new ones to your camera. It does this in the same way the camera does from the playback menu. Raw X Studio uses the camera’s internal processor to render out raw files. When you get home, instead of importing directly into capture one, copy the raf’s to a folder. Second, shoot your shots, but in raw not jpeg. Not to be rude, but you’re incorrect there actually is a way (It’s just a massive pain).įirstly, load the recipe into your camera so you can see what you’re doing. There’s no right or wrong approach, just what works for you. Also, some people RAW-edit for some scenarios and shoot JPEGs and Recipes for other scenarios. But, like I said, if you wish to use both, it could still save you a little time by getting you part way to a finished picture. These two approaches are more-or-less opposites of each other. If it’s RAW, then shoot RAW and edit the pictures as you want them to look. If it’s Film Simulation Recipes, that means relying an JPEGs and editing less if at all (I don’t edit, other than cropping/straightening sometimes). My advice is to embrace whichever approach that you are going to use. It can get you “halfway there” but will require some amount of manipulation to get a finished picture, and it won’t be 100% identical to the camera-made JPEG. If you use these Recipes and shoot RAW, Capture One will apply its version of its interpretation of some (but not all) of the JPEG settings to the RAW file. There are some creator’s work that i really like, and even though i know they use their own presets, I will try to find recipes that are close to them (but i think most of these just play with color grading)įilm Simulation Recipes are meant to be used in-camera for JPEGs that don’t require editing. My understanding is that the XT4 allows to only have 7 custom profiles loaded, so i’ll have to try the 7 before resetting them and add another 7 profiles, manually ? Well that’s some work, but still less than what you did ! I own a XT4, and plan to use bracketing to shoot a raw + 3 other custom profiles (as i don’t know yet which ones i will like). But i HAD to thank you for your work, i can’t imagine how passionate and dedicated you have to be to host a website, spend hours tweaking simulations and share your work, and even though i haven’t started to test those simulations, a big THANK YOU is necessary. Hi, it’s weird because it’s the first time i post something in a blog haha i’m used to comments on youtube, instagram, etc.