Cinematic
Fujifilm film simulation recipes for a cinematic look — muted contrast, controlled colour and film-grade tonality straight out of camera.
“Cinematic” usually means three things: muted, slightly desaturated colour; controlled, gentle contrast that holds the shadows; and a colour palette with a deliberate lean — teal shadows, warm highlights — rather than neutral accuracy.
How to think about cinematic recipes
Start from Eterna or Classic Chrome — the simulations modelled on motion-picture stocks, with their restrained, filmic curve. Flatten the contrast (pull highlights, lift shadows) toward a gradeable, low-contrast image, the way cinema is shot to be coloured later. Add a colour lean with the white-balance shift — cool the shadows, warm the lights — and a touch of grain for texture.
The mistake is reaching for saturation. Cinematic colour is about direction, not intensity — a consistent palette across the frame reads as “graded,” while punchy colour reads as a snapshot.
Recipes for Cinematic
3 entries
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Emulates CineStill 800T
CineStill 800T
A tungsten-balanced Classic Chrome recipe that emulates CineStill 800T for night and neon — cool teal shadows, warm streetlights, and heavy cinematic grain.
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Emulates Eterna cinema stock under flat daylight
Eterna Overcast
A soft cinematic Eterna recipe for overcast and lightly rainy days — lifted shadows, low saturation, and a cool cast for wet streets and muted architecture.
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Emulates Reala Ace (mixed-light cinematic interpretation)
Reala Ace Mixed Light
A restrained, cinematic Reala Ace recipe built for the situations where Portra is too daylight-warm and Classic Chrome is too contrasty — mixed indoor/outdoor afternoon light. X-Trans V exclusive.