![]() ![]() ![]() These are meant to serve as a starting point for editing, and you will need to make tweaks (exposure, tint, white balance) as every scene is different when it comes to light and colour (please refer to the video for an idea of how I work with these).There are two presets included, both relatively the same, other than one is neutral, and the other is warmer.In the Import dialog that appears, browse to the required path and select both the profiles and presets that you want to import. You made need to do this in two parts. To install in LR: From the menu bar, choose File > Import Profiles & Presets.This preset is meant to be used only with RAW files inside of Adobe Lightroom, as it’s made up of both a profile (for colour) and a preset (for light tonal adjustments and grain).To start, here’s a comparison showing two images-one shot on the Pentax 645N with Kodak Portra 400, and the other with the Fujifilm X100F with the ‘KM | Fuji Film RAW (Warm)’ preset. I have a video below that shows my workflow. You will need to tweak things like exposure and white balance afterward. I also want to note, that this isn’t a ‘one click and you’re done’ type preset. I have people reach out to me constantly asking me about which film presets I use and how I achieve a specific look with my Fuji files, so I figured I’d make this preset to help give people a starting point with their images. So, I refer to this as a ‘Kodak Portra’ style preset, because yes, it does a really good job at helping my digital images look like the ones I’ve shot using Kodak Portra 400 film (see examples below), but in the end, this is more of a personal preset that emulates my preference for colours and tones in an image. This preset simply emulates how I like my Fuji files to look and re-creates the tweaks that I make to match them with the images that I’ve shot on film. I also just want to make it clear that this isn’t a film emulation based on charts and calculations. After many requests, I finally sat down and created a Lightroom preset for FujiFilm users that serves as a starting point for achieving a look that’s close to the images that I shoot using Kodak Portra 400.
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