Kodak Gold 200
A warm, lightly grainy Kodak Gold 200 emulation built on Classic Negative — friendly skin, golden afternoon light, and saturated blue skies.
Portraits · Travel · Golden hour
Sample look
What this recipe is reaching for
A representative scene in the Kodak Gold 200 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 Negative
- Dynamic Range
- DR400
Tone
- Highlight
- −1
- Shadow
- 0
Color
- Color
- +2
- White Balance
- Daylight (5500K)
- WB Shift
- Red +2 · Blue −3
- Color Chrome FX
- Strong
- Color Chrome FX Blue
- Weak
Detail
- Sharpness
- 0
- Noise Reduction
- −2
- Clarity
- −2
Texture
- Grain Effect
- Weak, Small
Exposure
- ISO
- Auto, up to ISO 6400
- Exposure Comp.
- +1/3 to +2/3 EV
Kodak Gold 200 is the drugstore film that taught a generation what summer looks like — warm midtones, faintly green-leaning shadows, and blues that sit between cyan and navy. Classic Negative is the only Fuji simulation with the same shadow chemistry and the same refusal to render skin perfectly neutral, which is why every credible Gold emulation starts here.
Why this base
Classic Negative already pulls reds toward brick and greens toward olive, so the work is mostly about warming the whole frame and protecting highlights. Daylight white balance with a +2 Red / -3 Blue shift adds the characteristic Gold warmth without tipping into orange, and Color Chrome Effect Strong deepens the saturated reds and greens that Gold prints are known for. Color Chrome FX Blue Weak keeps skies rich but stops them going Velvia-cobalt — Gold’s blues are saturated, not punchy.
How to shoot it
DR400 with Highlight -1 is the safety net: it holds bright skies and white shirts in soft afternoon light, which is where this recipe lives. Shadow 0 and Color +2 give the print-like density Gold has when scanned flat, while Clarity -2 and Noise Reduction -2 take the digital edge off skin and let the Weak / Small grain breathe through. Meter +1/3 to +2/3 EV — Classic Negative tends to underexpose by default, and Gold negatives were always rated generously.
What to avoid
Hard noon sun will push Classic Negative’s shadows into a muddy region this recipe can’t fully rescue; wait for the light to soften or find open shade. Auto white balance will also fight you — it keeps trying to neutralize the warmth that defines the look, so leave WB locked to Daylight. And don’t push ISO past about 3200; the Weak grain is calibrated for clean files, and heavy sensor noise stacked on top reads as digital, not filmic.
X100VI · X-T5 · X-T50 · X-E5 · X-Pro3 · X-T4 · X100V · X-S20 · X-T30 II
Questions
4 answers
No. The X-T3 lacks Classic Negative, Clarity and Color Chrome FX Blue, which are central to this look. Pair it with an X-Trans IV or V body instead.
Kodak Gold's character is a fixed daylight-balanced warmth. Locking to 5500K with a +2 Red / -3 Blue shift keeps that golden cast consistent across frames, which Auto WB tends to neutralize.
It's not the ideal light. The recipe is tuned for soft morning, late afternoon and overcast — DR400 with Highlight -1 helps in bright scenes, but very contrasty midday will exaggerate Classic Negative's shadow roll-off.
Clarity -2 takes a touch of micro-contrast out of skin and foliage, mimicking the slightly soft, diffused rendering of a consumer C-41 film scan rather than a clinical digital file.