Kodachrome 64
A punchy Classic Chrome recipe emulating Kodachrome 64 — rich reds, deep blues, crisp contrast and the timeless National Geographic daylight look.
Daylight · Travel · Vivid color
Sample look
What this recipe is reaching for
A representative scene in the Kodachrome 64 register this recipe targets — the colour, contrast, and mood it tries to land straight out of camera.
AI-rendered approximation (Gemini 3 Pro Image, prompted with the recipe's Fuji simulation and settings). Not a photograph shot with this recipe — real shots will vary with your light and subject.
Settings
15 parameters
Look
- Film Simulation
- Classic Chrome
- Dynamic Range
- DR200
Tone
- Highlight
- +1
- Shadow
- +1
Color
- Color
- +2
- White Balance
- Daylight (5500K)
- WB Shift
- Red +2 · Blue −3
- Color Chrome FX
- Strong
- Color Chrome FX Blue
- Weak
Detail
- Sharpness
- +1
- Noise Reduction
- −3
- Clarity
- +1
Texture
- Grain Effect
- Weak, Small
Exposure
- ISO
- Auto, up to ISO 6400
- Exposure Comp.
- -1/3 to 0 EV
Kodachrome 64 defined the look of 20th-century travel photography: dense, honest reds, deep blues, snappy contrast, and a clarity that made bright daylight scenes leap off the page. This recipe brings that punch to Fujifilm.
Why Classic Chrome, pushed
Classic Chrome gives the muted-yet-characterful base Kodachrome shared, but Kodachrome was more saturated and more contrasty than a default Classic Chrome frame. So this recipe pushes back up: Color +2 restores Kodachrome’s rich primaries, Highlight +1 / Shadow +1 rebuilds its crisp contrast, and Clarity +1 adds the mid-tone bite that made the film feel sharp even when it wasn’t resolving fine detail.
Color Chrome FX Strong is essential here — it deepens reds and greens toward Kodachrome’s signature density, while Color Chrome FX Blue Weak keeps skies believable rather than electric. Dynamic Range DR200 preserves a little highlight headroom without flattening the contrast that defines the look.
The warm daylight balance
A Daylight white balance shifted Red +2 / Blue −3 gives the warm, sunny cast Kodachrome had in midday light. Keep grain quiet — Weak, Small — because Kodachrome 64 was a fine-grained, low-ISO stock; this is a clean, sharp look, not a textured one. Sharpness +1 leans into that crispness.
How to shoot it
Kodachrome wants light: clean sun, blue skies, strong colour — flags, painted walls, markets, landscapes. Expose a touch under (−1/3 to 0 EV) to keep colours dense and skies deep. This is the recipe for the bright, high-energy frames that flat-light films can’t carry.
X-T5 · X100VI · X-T50 · X-E5 · X-Pro3 · X-T4 · X100V · X-S20 · X-T30 II · X-H2 · X-H2S · X-M5 · X-T3
Questions
3 answers
Kodachrome 64 was a low-ISO slide film famous for rich, true reds, deep saturated blues, crisp contrast and archival permanence — the look of decades of National Geographic and travel photography.
Slide film like Kodachrome held shadow density and rewarded protecting highlights. A small −1/3 EV keeps colours dense and saturated rather than washed out.
Kodachrome 64 is at its best in clean, directional daylight. Its contrast and saturation suit bright scenes; in flat or low light, a softer recipe will read better.