Wednesday, 24 December 2025

Adding Grain to Jpegs

Yes it's arrived. And yes, it's gorgeous!

Ok, slight context.... I've recently purchased a Fujifilm X100 (original) as my lightweight 'travel' camera (see last two posts) instead of carrying around my full-frame S5 with numerous lenses. And it arrived yesterday. And it IS gorgeous. 😁

In my previous post, I also discussed how I would use the X100 to challenge my photography in 2026. To use it:

Okarito Schoolhouse. Fuji X-E2. Grain added

  • as a one camera, one lens set up
  • with a fixed 35mm focal length lens
  • shooting in jpeg only

Call it a New Years resolution if you will. And, like all New Years resolutions, we'll see how long it lasts?

I haven't used the X100 for any serious photography yet (it only arrived yesterday), but I have set the camera up for how I like to shoot, and I'm sure I will tweak this once I get a few excursions under my belt.

Initially I have it in aperture priority (choosing the aperture on the lens), single shot, central AF point, beep turned off, fine jpeg and auto ISO. I will play around with the optical vs electronic viewfinder, but initial thoughts are that I quite like the optical viewfinder with the information overlay. No, you don't get to see the changes you make to the image in real-time, but you do still get to see a histogram so you can nail exposure and can see what your current settings are. As with all range-finder setups with the viewfinder off to the left, the camera lens does protrude a bit into the bottom right corner, but not excessively. And it will be even less apparent without the lens hood attached.

With all that out of the way, my thoughts turned to how I was going to 'process' the images from the X100. Yes, I realise that if I am going to commit to shooting jpegs all year, then the camera does all the work for me. I should just be able to use the images SOOC (straight out of camera). After all, isn't that the point?

Donovan's Store, Okarito. Fujifilm X-E2 with gain added in Nik Color Efex Pro 4 (before & after)

Well, yes, I suppose it is. Shooting jpeg - especially when applying a film recipe - means that you are getting the 'look' you are after without having to go through the RAW editing process later. And the 'look' that I am after, is a 'representation' of film. 

I added italics to my last statement because I know that shooting digital is not, and never will be, the same as actually shooting film. But I'm happy with that - because I don't actually want to shoot film. But I do want to use the X100 to photograph in a similar way to shooting film, and achieve a similar look. And with the Fuji film recipes, I'm 90% there. What's the other 10% that's missing? Grain.

Lake Mapourika, South Westland. Fujifilm X-E2 with grain added in Nik Color Efex Pro 4

I recently ended my subscription to Adobe Photoshop and Lightroom, and since then I've been using Affinity Photo (which I paid full price for a few months before they made it free for everyone! Don't get me started...). While I don't for-see a lot of post-processing required to the jpegs from the X100, I do want to add some grain to the final images. In later camera models (the X-E3, X100V etc) grain can be added in-camera as part of the film recipe. Unfortunately not so in the X100.

I looked around at possible software solutions (of which there are many), and as amazing as some of them looked, they all needed an ongoing subscription to use them. Not happening.

Then I realised that I still had the Nik software suite from when Google owned it and they offered it for free. Nik's Analog Efex Pro 2 seemed just the ticket, so I fired it up and played around with making my own 'camera' grain settings. After playing around for a while, I couldn't seem to achieve the look I was after. The software really tries to overplay the old camera effect - it doesn't do subtle. All I really wanted was just some simple grain added. In the end I gave up on Analog Efex and opened Color Efex Pro 4 instead. And bingo - there it was. A simple 'grain effect' filter.

I have created my own custom effect that I can apply to all the images I want to add some grain to from the X100. Yes, it adds another step, and yes, it counts as post-processing on a workflow that is supposed to be SOOC - but I won't do it to every image - just the ones I want to post/share on the blog. The effect can be seen on the images above - all shot with the Fujifilm X-E2. The middle image of Donavan's Store shows some of the 'before and after', where prior to the red line in the image is the 'before'.

I like the look of the grain in the image (and yes, I know it's not grain as such, but simple added texture /noise) which completes the illusion of creating a film-look from a digital camera. And that's good enough for me. It's the closest thing to shooting film, without actually shooting film.

I'm looking forward to taking the X100 out for it's first official shoot. I've already programmed three film recipes into the camera, and will try them out with the film grain added in Color Efex Pro 4 and post these next time. Then it's bring on 2026!


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Thanks again
Wayne