The Essential 7 Film Simulation Recipes to Program Into Your Fujifilm Camera First — Part 4: X-Trans III

Last Warm Light on Wasatch Front – Farmington, UT – Fujifilm X-H1 – Negative Print

Part 1 — X-Trans V, Part 2 — X-Trans IV, Part 3 — X-T3/X-T30, Part 5 — X-Trans II, Part 6 — X-Trans I

I frequently get asked: which seven Film Simulation Recipes should I program into my camera first? I’ve published over 300 on this website and in the Fuji X Weekly App, and the choices can become overwhelming. I’ve attempted to help out with this dilemma several times, including the Which Film Simulation Recipe, When? series, Try These 3 Film Simulation Recipes No Matter Your Fujifilm Camera, The 10 Best Film Simulation Recipes on the Fuji X Weekly App, Top 25 Most Popular Film Simulation Recipes of 2023, and many others. My hope is that these types of articles help you to find some good Recipes to try, in case you’re not sure where to begin or what to use. This post is Part 4 of the series.

The list of Film Simulation Recipes below are my “Essential 7” for X-Trans III cameras, which are the X-Pro2, X100F, X-T2, X-T20, X-E3, and X-H1. If you are not sure which Recipes to program into your C1-C7 Custom Presets, these are my suggestions for you to begin with. These are the ones that you must try, in my opinion. You might love all of them, you might only appreciate some of them, or you might not like any of them. Each person has their own styles and tastes, and there’s no one single Recipe that’s universally loved by everyone (although a few seem close). Still, give these seven a try—keep the ones you like, and replace the ones that you don’t.

Follow the Bird to Salt Lake – Salt Lake City, UT – Fujifilm X-H1 – Cross Process

A couple of important side notes here. First, this list isn’t necessarily made up of versatile Recipes. Like film, most Film Simulation Recipes have specific use cases—such as sunny daylight—so not all of these option will be good for night photography, for example, or perhaps other situations. Be sure to visit my Which Film Simulation Recipe, When? article for a more comprehensive group of options for various use cases. Also, X-Trans III models cannot save a White Balance Shift within the C1-C7 Custom Presets. You can only save one WB Shift per White Balance type, which means you’ll have to remember to adjust the WB Shift each time you change Recipes. The suggestions below do not take this into account; however, the Which Film Simulation Recipe, When? article does, so be sure to read it.

The Essential 7 Film Simulation Recipes to program into your X-Trans III camera first:

C1 — Kodachrome II

C2 — Vintage Kodachrome

C3 — Classic Chrome

C4 — Fujicolor Superia 800

C5 — Everyday Astia

C6 — CineStill 800T

C7 — Agfa Scala

Find these Film Simulation Recipes and many more on the Fuji X Weekly App! Consider becoming a Patron subscriber to unlock the best App experience and to support Fuji X Weekly.

5 comments

  1. Jacek Rogoz · January 5, 2024

    Thanks for this article. I noticed C3 — Classic Chrome is linking to another recipe, to Kodak Gold 200

    • Ritchie Roesch · January 8, 2024

      Thanks for letting me know! It’s now been fixed. Sorry for this mistake.

      A side note: Kodak Gold 200 can be used on X-Trans III models, and is well-worth trying. 😀

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  3. Dito · October 23

    If you could choose C1-C7 for X100F with each WB assigned differently. What would it be?

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