How well does Fujifilm’s Acros-R film simulation compare to real 35mm Fuji Acros 100II film?

Dale Rogers

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I shoot about 50% film and 50% digital these days. For digital, I shoot with the Fujifilm X series cameras and lenses. Fujifilm cameras appealed to me several years ago because of the retro styling and film camera like controls for shutter speed, ISO and aperture. I also loved the ability to use Fujifilm film emulsion filters on the in-camera jpgs such as Velvia, Acros, Provia, Astia, Classic Chrome and PRO Neg to name a few.

I love shooting film on a variety of 35 and 120 cameras because the process of slowing down and thinking about a shot elicits a certain mindfulness to my photography. With film, I carefully consider each shot and I slow down. There’s no spray and pray with a roll of 36 exposures. With film, the process and experience of finding and executing the shot are as important and satisfying as the final image itself. There’s a certain Zen with acknowledging your limitations and working through them to find the perfect capture.

Left: Fujifilm ACROS 100II film / Right: Fujifilm X-Pro3 Acros-R simulation

Another reason for shooting film is the ‘look’ that is magic. Magic, the noun, is defined as “the power of apparently influencing events by using mysterious or supernatural forces” and as an adjective as “wonderful; exciting”. Shooting film relates to both the mysterious and exciting.

I develop my black and white film at home. Using a combination of chemicals, mix ratios, agitation, drying and working film out of canisters and onto developing reels in total darkness reminds me of ancient alchemy. And at the end of this mysterious alchemical process, I find images – moments trapped in time, that have spontaneously appeared on a piece of celluloid. Sometimes the moments captured are from times I can not recall but, there they are, captured for all eternity as if by magic on these rolls of film and they are beautiful.

Top: Fujifilm ACROS 100II film / Bottom: Fujifilm X-Pro3 Acros-R simulation

When Fujifilm announced late last year they are updating their digital rangefinder, the X-Pro series, to provide a more film-like shooting experience, I was intrigued and excited. The Fujifilm X-Pro3 does away with the back LCD screen and instead has a small window reminiscent of a film memo holder. This little memo holder display looks as if you have just torn off the side of a box of film and inserted it into the memo holder. The back panel does tilt down to reveal a traditional LCD screen with all the info you would typically find on a Fujifilm X Series camera.

Left: Fujifilm ACROS 100II film / Right: Fujifilm X-Pro3 Acros-R simulation

And lastly, the X-Pro3 rangefinder has a hybrid viewfinder that can display a more traditional looking optical-electronic viewfinder giving you a natural view of your scene with frame lines to equate with the lens focal length. This is great for those who enjoy seeing bits of the scene outside of the captured image and allows for easier framing of shots. It also can be quickly switched to a traditional LCD viewfinder.

Left: Fujifilm ACROS 100II film / Right: Fujifilm X-Pro3 Acros-R simulation

The release of the Fujifilm X-Pro3 camera coincided with me getting some recently re-released Fujifilm ACROS 100II film.

Given my love of Fujifilm digital cameras, film photography and ACROS film, I desperately wanted to shoot and compare the new X-Pro3 alongside a rangefinder film camera. The good people at Fujifilm Australia were kind enough to send me an X-Pro3 to use for a couple of weeks to satiate my desire.

For my Fujifilm ACROS shootout, I dusted off a Yashica Electro 35 GSN with a 45mm f/1.7 lens. I placed a red filter on the lens and loaded the Fujifilm ACROS 100II 35mm film.

Top: Fujifilm ACROS 100II film / Bottom: Fujifilm X-Pro3 Acros-R simulation

The X-Pro3 is a crop sensor camera so I attached a 27mm (41mm full-frame equivalent) f/2.8 lens to the X-Pro3 and dialed in the ACROS -R film simulation. The -R is the ACROS simulation with a simulated red filter. So in theory, I had two rangefinders with very similar specs.

I threw both cameras in my car and carried them around for the 2 weeks pulling them out to take identical photos around my home on Phillip Island, Australia.

Top: Fujifilm ACROS 100II film / Bottom: Fujifilm X-Pro3 Acros-R simulation

Once 36 exposures were taken, I used a stand developing method with a 1:100 Rodinal solution to develop the film and scanned the images on an Epson V550 scanner.

Top: Fujifilm ACROS 100II film / Bottom: Fujifilm X-Pro3 Acros-R simulation

These shots look pretty similar. Fujfilm did a great job on the ACROS digital film simulation. I was surprised the shots were similar in look and feel. However they do exemplify the differences between digital and film. From these images I have a much greater appreciation for the way film preserves and manages highlights. They look superb. Of course the digital sensor excels at shadow recovery even in a jpg file.

Top: Fujifilm ACROS 100II film / Bottom: Fujifilm X-Pro3 Acros-R simulation

As for the X-Pro3, I like the rangefinder feel especially when using the optical viewfinder. It does help to recreate a film shooting aesthetic. I probably would not use this camera out shooting landscapes as I found the backscreen cumbersome when flipped down as I changed camera orientation or as a serious wildlife/sports camera. I put a 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6 on the body and it did not have the same balance and feel as my X-T3. However, It’s a super fun camera to shoot and I reckon it would excel as a street shooter and add a little interest and fun to the digital experience.

Which images do you prefer?

About the Author

Dale Rogers is a photographer and photography educator based in Phillip Island, Australia. He is the co-founder of Photo Rangers, along with his wife and fellow educator, Cecilia. You can find out more about Dale, Cecilia and their work on the Photo Rangers website, or follow them on Facebook and Instagram. This article was also published here and shared with permission.

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We love it when our readers get in touch with us to share their stories. This article was contributed to DIYP by a member of our community. If you would like to contribute an article, please contact us here.

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9 responses to “How well does Fujifilm’s Acros-R film simulation compare to real 35mm Fuji Acros 100II film?”

  1. Clement RENAUT Avatar

    film is way better

  2. Albin Avatar
    Albin

    Recently getting tnto Look Up Tables (LUTs) including Fuji simulations for my Canon RAW, with no idea how they compare with the “real” Fuji digital settings, and now the even realer benchmark film. Interesting that the latter seems uniformly more contrasty – one would have to go to work with sliders on the digital preset.

  3. himura Avatar
    himura

    I feel the difference is too huge for this to be a fair comparison. It is difficult to believe that fuji will see this on their tests and then call it a day.

  4. David Purton Avatar
    David Purton

    Red filter? So you were shooting at around 25 asa? More important is the resulting tonal and contrast shift between the images published here making comparison difficult? Acros, when tested in a (futile!) film vs digital review a few years ago did come out superbly well against digital, particularly from MF cameras, Mamiya 7 from memory…but critically the negs were drum scanned otherwise it’s superb qualities of very fine grain and sharpness did not compete with its digital competitors.

    Which of course doesn’t matter I guess because the reasons for shooting film are not purely about resolution but about process as the author points out.

    Great pics by the way!

  5. barry wilson Avatar
    barry wilson

    The fact that both film and digital images are manipulated “to taste” prior to presentation means the extreme differences in the film vs digital images above are bogus. By manipulating certain parameters during processing, if one desired both images in each set could have appeared identical. The only reason to shoot film is because one enjoys the process not because of differences in output.

  6. Jeffrey Grant Avatar
    Jeffrey Grant

    The digital images look flat. IMO.

  7. TerryB Avatar
    TerryB

    You used a red filter with the film shots and no wonder I see no correlation at all. What a waste of time and useless review.

  8. Rob Lipet Avatar
    Rob Lipet

    Almost looks as if the digital images were printed on warm tone low grade paper and the film on cold tone. If the Fuji images were shot with red filter simulation it’s way off. It could closely be corrected in a photo editing program. Then again,I don’t need to concern myself banging a film camera around as much as an expensive digital camera.

  9. Leon Hascal Avatar
    Leon Hascal

    Clearly the digital camera shots were edited to look terrible. I never had such flat underexposed images even jpg SOOC. This review is absurd nonsense. Why are the film images all sharpened and properly exposed ? Who shoots all their b&w with an extreme red filter to test dynamic range? That’s moronic. The T3 sensor has superior dynamic range to across film which wasn’t even particularly good film. The detail preserved in a raw file from the T3 or T4 is greater than a 35mm neg. The raw file can be pushed and pulled 3 stops in each direction within the same frame so right off the bat film cant compete.

    I am someone who still shoots film regularly and even I’m saying this article was just assanine!