Kodak Portra 400
A warm, gentle Classic Negative recipe that emulates Kodak Portra 400 — soft contrast, honest skin tones, and a golden lean for portraits and travel.
Portraits · Golden hour · Warm tones
Sample look
What this recipe is reaching for
A representative scene in the Kodak Portra 400 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
- −1
Color
- Color
- +1
- White Balance
- Daylight (5500K)
- WB Shift
- Red +2 · Blue −4
- Color Chrome FX
- Strong
- Color Chrome FX Blue
- Weak
Detail
- Sharpness
- −1
- Noise Reduction
- −4
- Clarity
- −2
Texture
- Grain Effect
- Weak, Small
Exposure
- ISO
- Auto, up to ISO 6400
- Exposure Comp.
- +1/3 to +2/3 EV
Kodak Portra 400 is the film most photographers reach for when they want colour that flatters people without shouting. It holds highlights softly, lifts shadows, and renders skin with a warm, believable glow — which is exactly what this recipe chases on Fujifilm.
Why Classic Negative
Classic Negative is Fujifilm’s most “film-like” base: muted primaries, a gentle S-curve, and a slight magenta-into-the-shadows lean that reads as analogue rather than digital. Starting from Classic Negative — rather than a punchier simulation — means the warmth comes from tone and white balance, not from cranked saturation. The result keeps Portra’s restraint.
Dynamic Range DR400 protects highlights in bright, contrasty light (the price is that it needs ISO 640 or higher). Highlight −1 / Shadow −1 flattens the curve toward Portra’s low-contrast latitude, while a small Color +1 keeps things from going flat. Color Chrome FX Strong deepens foliage and warm tones without touching skin; Color Chrome FX Blue Weak adds just enough separation in skies.
The warm lean
The Daylight white balance shifted Red +2 / Blue −4 is the heart of the look — it pushes the whole frame toward Portra’s golden warmth and keeps it consistent across a shoot. Sharpness −1, Noise Reduction −4, and Clarity −2 soften the digital edge so faces look filmic rather than clinical. A weak, small grain finishes the texture.
How to shoot it
Portra loves soft, directional light — open shade, overcast, and the hour before sunset. Expose a touch bright (+1/3 to +2/3 EV) to keep skin luminous; Portra was always happiest slightly over-exposed. Avoid harsh midday sun, where the low-contrast curve can read muddy — save that light for a punchier recipe.
X-T5 · X100VI · X-T50 · X-E5 · X-Pro3 · X-T4 · X100V · X-S20 · X-T30 II · X-H2 · X-H2S · X-M5
Questions
3 answers
Kodak Portra 400 — a colour negative film prized for soft contrast, forgiving latitude, and natural skin tones with a warm, slightly golden cast.
Any Fujifilm X body with the Classic Negative film simulation — every X-Trans IV and X-Trans V camera (X-T4 onward, X100V/VI, X-Pro3, X-T50, X-E5, X-S20, X-M5 and more). The X-T3 and older lack Classic Negative.
Portra's signature is consistency. A fixed daylight white balance with a warm shift keeps skin tones stable frame-to-frame instead of drifting as Auto re-meters each scene.