Top 10 Fujicolor Film Simulation Recipes

Spooner Cove – Montaña de Oro SP, CA – Fujifilm X100V – Fujicolor 100 Gold

When I published my Top 25 Most Popular Film Simulation Recipes of 2023 (so far…), what was surprisingly absent were any that were modeled after or inspired by Fujifilm emulsions. The Top 25 were almost entirely Kodak-like Recipes. That shouldn’t be too surprising since Kodak was the most popular film manufacturer, so the desire for a Kodak rendering is to be expected. But, personally, I really appreciate many of the Fujicolor Recipes, and their complete exclusion from the Top 25 list was a bit unexpected.

Someone suggested that I should make a new list, this one showcasing the most popular Fujifilm-like Recipes. Just like the Top 25 list, this one is based on page-view website statistics. It’s a flawed method, but the best that I have available to me. I included the overall ranking, too, just so that you can see where they stand in the big picture.

The number one most popular Fujicolor Recipe is for X-Trans III cameras (plus the X-T3 and X-T30), as is number eight. The tenth spot is an X-Trans V Recipe. All the others are for X-Trans IV cameras. Eight of these use Classic Negative as the base, one uses PRO Neg. Std, and one uses Velvia. Some of these are personal favorite Recipes of mine, while some of my other personal favorite Recipes that are modeled after or inspired by Fujifilm emulsions didn’t make this list.

Without any further delay, here are the Top 10 Fujicolor Film Simulation Recipes:

#1 (#30 overall):

#2 (#41 overall):

#3 (#53 overall):

#4 (#54 overall):

#5 (#57 overall):

#6 (#60 overall):

#7 (#61 overall):

#8 (#70 overall):

#9 (#72 overall):

#10 (#76 overall):

Find these Film Simulation Recipes and many more on the Fuji X Weekly App!

Top 10 Film Simulation Recipes

Two Caballeros – Culleoka, TX – Fujifilm X-E4 – Kodachrome 64 Recipe

I’m always fascinated by which Film Simulation Recipes you are using. I get a glimpse on social media, but my best gauge is the website statistics; specifically, which Recipe articles are viewed the most. Two months ago I shared with you the Top 10 most viewed Recipe articles of 2022 plus the most viewed through the first two months of 2023, and I was surprised by a couple of the rankings. Looking at this two months later, I’m once again surprised by a few things, and not so much by most of it.

So far in 2023, seven of the ten—including the Top 3—Film Simulation Recipes are for X-Trans IV camera. From the data I have, the majority of people who shoot with Recipes are doing so on X-Trans IV models. Kodachrome 64 remains king of Recipes, Kodak Portra 400 v2 is a close second, and Kodak Portra 400 is solidly third. Vintage Kodak and Classic Chrome (the original Fuji X Weekly Recipe), which are both for X-Trans III cameras (plus the X-T3 and X-T30), hold the fourth and fifth spots. Kodak Tri-X 400, the only B&W Recipe on this list, is sixth. Those first half-dozen are all identical rankings to 2022.

Kodak Ultramax 400 didn’t make last year’s Top 10 list, but it did rank number seven through the first two months of this year, and it continues to hold that through April. The X-Trans III version of Kodachrome II dropped one spot, while the X-Trans IV version moved out of the Top 10 completely. Pacific Blues didn’t make the Top 10 last year, but is number nine so far in 2023, up one spot from two months ago. Reggie’s Portra also didn’t make the Top 10 last year, but now holds the last spot, down one from two months ago, switching places with Pacific Blues. Kodak Ektar 100 and Nostalgic Negative both fell out of the Top 10.

10 Most Viewed Film Simulation Recipes of 2023 (…so far)

#1:

#2:

#3:

#4:

#5:

#6:

#7:

#8:

#9:

#10:

Now let’s look at April-only. How did the Film Simulation Recipes rank during those 30 days?

The big surprise is that Vibrant Arizona is number two. It’s a little complicated, because that article actually includes four Recipes—two for X-Trans IV and two for X-Trans V. Even though I published it only nine days ago, the Vibrant Arizona Recipe, which is intended to produce a Wes Anderson aesthetic, is being used a heck-of-a-lot right now! The only other surprises are that Pacific Blues moved up to number eight, while Kodak Tri-X 400 fell two spots to number nine and Kodachrome II fell two spots all the way to the bottom. The first seven Recipes, plus the last one, all use the Classic Chrome film sim, which is Fujifilm’s most popular.

10 Most Viewed Film Simulation Recipes of April

#1:

#2:

#3:

#4:

#5:

#6:

#7:

#8:

#9:

#10:

Find these Film Simulation Recipes and many more on the Fuji X Weekly — Film Recipes App!

Top 10 Film Simulation Recipes of 2022 (& 2023 So Far)

Two Caballeros – Culleoka, TX – Fujifilm X-E4 – Kodachrome 64 Recipe

After yesterday’s Take the Blind Blind Film Simulation Recipe Test article, I’ve been asked a couple of times what were the 10 Film Simulation Recipes that I provided to Andrew Goodcamera. You see, he asked me to give him a list of the Top 10 most popular Film Simulation Recipes of 2022. Now, I have no way of knowing which are the most used; however, I can tell which are the Top 10 most viewed Recipes on the Fuji X Weekly website. Are page-views a good indication of use? Probably, but it’s also quite possible that some Recipes are overrepresented and others are underrepresented. Unfortunately I don’t have a more accurate metric, so this will have to suffice.

Below you will find the Top 10 most popular Film Simulation Recipes of 2022 based on page-views, in order from least to most popular. Seven of them are X-Trans IV Recipes (for the X-Pro3, X100V, X-T4, X-S10, X-E4, & X-T30 II cameras), and three are X-Trans III Recipes (plus compatible with the X-T3 & X-T30). X-Trans V Recipes are pretty new—the oldest published in the third week of November—so it make sense that none made this list, and I suspect that they’ll become increasingly more popular throughout 2023. The Recipes for X-Trans I, II, Bayer, and GFX just aren’t nearly popular enough to crack this list (not likely a Top 20 list, either). The majority of people who shoot using Film Simulation Recipes are doing so on X-Trans III and newer cameras, and the largest group are shooting with X-Trans IV models.

Interestingly, the Classic Chrome Recipe, which is the second one ever published on Fuji X Weekly, ranks pretty high. Black-and-white Recipes aren’t usually as popular as color, so I’m happy to see the Kodak Tri-X 400 Recipe climb the list. I’m not surprised by much else, so let’s get to that list!

Top 10 Film Simulation Recipes of 2022:

Number 10:

Number 9:

Number 8:

Number 7:

Number 6:

Number 5:

Number 4:

Number 3:

Number 2:

Number 1:

Which of these Film Simulation Recipes do you use most? What is your favorite Recipe not found on this list? Let me know in the comments!

I also thought it would be interesting to see if 2023 is trending different so far, or if the Recipes rank the same. While the top half of the list looks nearly identical, there are some notable differences in the bottom half. Pacific Blues is one of my top-favorite recipes, so I’m happy to see it crack the Top 10.

Top 10 Film Simulation Recipes of 2023 (so far…):

Number 10:

Number 9:

Number 8:

Number 7:

Number 6:

Number 5:

Number 4:

Number 3:

Number 2:

Number 1:

Find these Film Simulation Recipes and nearly 300 more on the Fuji X Weekly — Film Recipes App!

Top 10 Most Popular Posts of 2017

Seattle Center – Seattle, WA – Fujifilm X100F

We’re a few days into the new year. In January I like to reflect on the previous year, what was good and what wasn’t, what I experienced and what I wished I had experienced, the successes and failures, gains and losses, dreams realized and abandoned, etc., etc. It’s good to look back so as to get a better perspective on where you’re going.

As a very small part of this process, I looked at Fuji X Weekly, what took place here, and how it’s all going. I’ve shared a few insights with you already, and I will share some more with you in a few different posts in the coming weeks.

For this article I will show you what posts were the most viewed, plus, as a bonus, which were the most overlooked, that maybe the readers of this blog missed. Not to brag, but there’s some quality material here. I invite you to click the links and read the different articles.

One thing that I found interesting is that, by a large margin, Film Simulation recipes are the most popular thing on Fuji X Weekly. Lots of people are searching the web for ideas on which simulations and settings are best. I’m happy to share mine with you, and you can expect more to be published in the coming months.

Without any more delay, below are my top 10 most popular posts of 2017 on Fuji X Weekly, in order of most viewed to least:

My Fujifilm X100F Classic Chrome Film Simulation Recipe

My Fujifilm X100F Acros Film Simulation Recipe

My Fujifilm X100F Vintage Kodachrome Film Simulation Recipe

My Fujifilm X100F Velvia Film Simulation Recipe

My Fujifilm X100F Astia Film Simulation Recipe

Fujifilm X100F Digital Teleconverter

Digital Film – Why I Shoot JPEGs With The Fujifilm X100F

My Fujifilm X100F Acros Push-Process Film Simulation Recipe

Understanding X-Trans

Leaf Shutter & Flash & X100F – Oh, My!

Top 10 most overlooked posts of 2017 on Fuji X Weekly, in order of least viewed to most:

Fujifilm X Raw Studio

Simplicity vs Complexity

Fujifilm X100F Battery Life

So Why The Fujifilm X100F?

Authenticity & Photography

Fujifilm Fanboy

Placing An Attachment Ring On A Fujifilm X100F

5 Essential Elements of Photographic Vision

Fujifilm X100F Advanced Filter: Toy Camera, Part 1

Why I Dislike The PASM Dial (And Love The Fujifilm X100F)