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Now available for Capture One, an in-depth emulation of one of the most beloved black and white film stocks, Kodak Tri-X 400. Hugely versatile with a crisp, distinctive look, it’s one of the most enduring monochrome films of all time. Created by Digistock.
This isn’t just a single preset, it’s an entire toolbox covering more than 30 individual presets as well as a variety of coloured filters and colour toning. It’s laid out in a logical and consistent way, meaning you can find the look you need without blindly clicking a bunch of presets until you hit the right one!
The different styles cover a single base look plus pushed/pulled versions, but then these are duplicated in 5 different folders. Each folder changes the ‘mojo’ of the look, with the possibilities being an authentic 35mm and medium format scan emulation with realistic grain and detail, a generic faded look with softer grain, a ‘natural’ look which blends digital sharpness with subtle grain, and a totally clean variant.
Although there are completely clean variants of all presets, a lot of the work went into creating a plausible emulation of real film scans. This doesn’t just mean realistic film grain either; part of the goal was to capture the sharpness/detail of different negative sizes (35mm has less resolution/sharpness and a coarser grain than medium format, for example). There’s even a technique to emulate halation around highlights – likely a first for film presets – to subtly capture the look of bright light scattering in the film emulsion. We’re unashamedly geeky when it comes to getting all the little details right!
There are six basic looks, reflecting Tri-X shot at different speeds using push/pull darkroom techniques. However, these looks are repeated in five different sets of varients, grouped in folders. The basic look of each preset is similar whichever folder you pick, the variants mostly affect how ‘analog’ the images will look, ie film grain, sharpness, fading etc.
1. 35mm Scan We start with the fun one! These variants go the whole hog in replicating the look of scanned, 35mm negatives. You’ve got a decent amount of the famous salt-and-pepper grain and less detail is resolved, giving you something that could probably fool even a seasoned film shooter if they’re not studying it too closely…
2. Medium Format Scan If you still want the look of a real film scan but with more resolution and finer grain, these variants are your ideal starting point. Grain is tighter and more controlled and this makes the gradient between tones a little more subtle. To really nail the 120mm look, try cropping to a traditional medium format aspect ratio (1.35:1 for 645, square for 6×6, 1.20:1 for 6×7 etc).
3. Faded Print The one you want for vintage looks! Similar tonality to the other two but with crushed, lifted blacks, making it reminiscent of a faded print or a poorly scanned/underexposed negative. Sometimes the crushed black thing can be a bit hipstery and overdone, but we trust you to keep it tasteful…
4. Natural Grain A perfect compromise between digital accuracy and film mojo. Tonally the same as the ‘scanned’ ones but with less emphasis on realism, so you get the same base look but with a much more subtle grain and the sharpness of digital. They’re my go-to for most things, giving you black and white conversions with a little analog mojo.
5. Clean Digital Do you dislike adding grain and softness but still want the TX400 look? Not a problem. This is the same core set of styles without any of the ‘analog’ stuff.
A) Tri-X 400 (Classic) A base look with a great balance between contrast and smooth gradation between tones. Contrast and grain is based on Rodinal development, with lots of punch. A great all-rounder.
B) Tri-X 400 (Neutral) A slightly more neutral base look approximating a typical Tri-X scan. Good for busier scenes or ones with a lot of dynamic range, where the Classic profile is a touch too intense.
C) Tri-X 400 (800) Underexposed by a stop and then ‘pushed’ puring developing. This increases contrast by raising bright areas of the film during development, but at the cost of more grain. Great for punchy portraits.
D) Tri-X 400 (1600) Pushed by two stops to give a very contrasty image with strong grain and less subtlety in grey tones. Really effective for concert photography and street work, and anything else with bold composition.
E) Tri-X 400 (3200) Lots of contrast and grain here, and a noticeable loss of shadow detail as the film is pushed up to very high ISO levels. Gives an authentic feel to low-light/night photos!
F) Tri-X 400 (200) Overexposed by one stop to give the equivalent of an ISO200 film. ‘Pulling’ is a less popular technique for Tri-X, but sometimes handy for high-contrast scenes as it offers a gentler, less contrasty tonality.
Once you’ve found the basic look you need, you can further tweak it with a selection of colour filters, emulating the use of a tinted filter over the lens during shooting. These alter the colour response of the film; for example an orange filter will make skin tones brighter and blue skies darker.
There’s also a selection of toning techniques, from subtle warmtone/cooltone paper to chemical tints like sepia and selenium. These are full layer-compatible so you can adjust the opacity as needed.
We’ve developed a technique for emulating halation in the film (subtle bloom around bright light sources), but Capture One doesn’t yet have the means to make this a simple single-click preset. However, we’ve included a preset with the adjustments, which needs to be added to a luma-masked layer to work effectively. This is explained in the manual. Once you’ve done this on one image, it can be copied to any others in your catalog, so you won’t have to do it manually for every single image. It’s fairly subtle but I think it makes a difference.
Thanks for taking the time to take a look at Digistock presets! Thank you for your support and we really do hope it’ll save you time and effort in getting to the looks you want.
Kyle
Digistock
License | Personal, Commercial, Extended |
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Christian (verified owner) –
He knows how film FEELS like and that goes for all of his style packs! And he did an amazing job recreating this FEELING in his packs. Thank you for making this available! I bought at first his tri-x 400 pack, thought, ok lets give it a try and I was simply amazed by its results and possibilities, especially the FEELING it creates. You can have it all, from clean, soft to harsh and thick and dirty, depends on how far you are willing to go.
Here I found the perfect basis.
Before I stumbled over his appoarch creating film like styles for capture one, I nearly bought every other C1 style pack that seemed promising, but never got that feeling (fully!), that I had when scanning my own films. I had to tweak the competitor styles a lot before getting the wanted result or never got there (often initially somehow overdone in terms of micro contrast, too colored skin tones or a too extensive use of the hdr sliders, or too artificial looking, etc.).
With this tri-x 400 style pack he delivers a ton of variants and possibilities and a solid ground, also for further tweaking with never loosing this special feeling.
I like a more harsh, thick, a litte underexposed, dirty look, here I really got the perfect basis for creating that.
So thanks again and keep it on!