You can try Kodak Portra 800, Kodak Color Plus 200. These will be similar in color and contrast, and I would also recommend something bolder like Kodak Vision 200T V1 or V2. I am sure you will love that one as well. :]
On the topic of Fujifilm simulations, I just wanted to clarify—I don’t plan on recreating user created Fujifilm simulations. I only recreated Reggie’s Portra recipe, and it was a one-time gift to the community. But my focus here with this project, is to recreate popular film stocks in-camera for Sony cameras, each with its own character, while also designing a few original signature looks of my own.
1
Unknown member
Jan 19
Replying to
I have used the Asteroid City (confused initially as it was 200T in your comment but it was T200 in the PDF file). However, I'm not sure if I should use S-log2 or S-log3 for my camera since I have both (I have a ZV-E10). Also, I noticed that some of the shadows are crushed with blue pixels (See the people sitting in the lower right of the photo). You can see that the shirt is clipped.
Lastly, I'm not sure how to match it with the A6700 since I don't have any other camera and a color checker.
Use S-Log2 if available, it has higher contrast. S-log3 is too flat sometimes. I would still use S-log2 for JPGs, but S-Log 2 is no longer available in newer cameras, unfortunately.
Maybe just push a bit more warmth by lifting the white balance by 100-200m Kelvin, and it will be perfect. Also, if you want cleaner shadows, expose a bit more to the right, as it's a bit underexposed. Besides this, it looks great!
Thanks for letting me know about the typo on Kodak Vision 200T, will fix that.
Hei there, welcome to the community!
You can try Kodak Portra 800, Kodak Color Plus 200. These will be similar in color and contrast, and I would also recommend something bolder like Kodak Vision 200T V1 or V2. I am sure you will love that one as well. :]
On the topic of Fujifilm simulations, I just wanted to clarify—I don’t plan on recreating user created Fujifilm simulations. I only recreated Reggie’s Portra recipe, and it was a one-time gift to the community. But my focus here with this project, is to recreate popular film stocks in-camera for Sony cameras, each with its own character, while also designing a few original signature looks of my own.