Kodak 800 Max. Cal Takes Photos
Kodak 800 Max. Cal Takes Photos
Kodak 800 Max. Cal Takes Photos

If you’re a Fujifilm shooter looking for a versatile film simulation recipe that holds up across changing light and landscapes, this one’s for you. I used it throughout a long hike in the Peak District, and it handled everything from soft woodland tones to wide, exposed vistas.

Here’s the full recipe:

  • Film Simulation: Classic Negative
  • Grain Effect: Weak, Small
  • Color Chrome Effect: Strong
  • Color Chrome FX Blue: Off
  • White Balance: Daylight, +2 Red & -5 Blue
  • Dynamic Range: DR200
  • Highlight: 0
  • Shadow: +0.5
  • Color: +2
  • Sharpness: +1
  • High ISO NR: -4
  • Clarity: +3
  • ISO: Auto, up to ISO 6400
  • Exposure Compensation: 0 to +2/3 (typically)

Why This Recipe Works

Classic Chrome gives a filmic base — slightly muted, contrasty, and clean. It doesn’t overdo colours, which helps with consistency on long hikes where lighting constantly shifts.

The +2 Red and -5 Blue white balance tweak pulls warm tones forward while keeping blues under control. It’s subtle but makes skies and shaded areas feel more natural.

Color Chrome Effect on Strong helps add depth, especially to foliage and midtones, without overprocessing. I left FX Blue off here to avoid making shadows too cold.

I kept grain light and texture balanced with clarity at +3 and sharpness at +1. It keeps fine detail intact without looking over-sharpened. Combined with -4 noise reduction, you get a cleaner, more natural image that still feels true to Fujifilm’s character.

The DR200 setting provides flexibility in bright conditions without dulling shadows, and I mostly stayed around +1/3 exposure compensation to lift the mids without blowing highlights.

Ideal Uses

This recipe is best for:

  • Overcast or variable light
  • Woodland and trail scenes
  • Balanced skin tones in outdoor portraits
  • General walkabout photography where you want a consistent feel without needing to tweak much in post

Final Thoughts

This is one of those recipes I keep saved in-camera for days when I don’t want to think about editing. It’s simple, reliable, and surprisingly flexible. Great for anyone wanting that travel-friendly, JPEG-ready workflow especially when you’re outdoors and just want to focus on the shot.

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