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Fujifilm X-Trans II film like qualities?

Started Mar 1, 2021 | Discussions thread
Ulrik Christiansen
Ulrik Christiansen Senior Member • Posts: 2,837
Re: Fujifilm X-Trans II film like qualities?

Threaded wrote:

Ulrik Christiansen wrote:

inlikeflynn wrote:

Threaded wrote:

I think if you’re going to go down the “filmic” old sensor rabbit hole then it’s generally accepted that the original X-Trans, principally in form of the X-Pro1, is the one to go for. In Fuji world that’s really the source legend of the whole film-like mythology.

X-Trans II was actually heavily criticised at the time for losing the fabled “organic” look and seeming too digital. In comparison to the X-Trans I JPEG’s, the results are a lot more polished in some ways, bolder, and less subtle. Someone on this forum once said it was as if X-Trans I produced matte prints, and X-Trans II glossy.

Of course that’s all subjective, but X-Trans II’s worst crime was what it (or at least the image processor in those second gen cameras) did to skin tones at higher ISO. At 1600 ISO or above, the XE2, XT1 etc all apply a very heavy handed noise reduction to skin tones which renders faces waxy and artificial looking - a deliberate “enhancement” which couldn’t ever be turned off even with the in camera NR setting turned down. X-Trans III and later cameras removed this, or at least reigned it in significantly.

For that reason, as a jpeg shooter, X-Trans II is by far my least favourite sensor and I was very glad to move on from it.

👆 this reply deserves to be in this thread twice.

I remember hearing nothing but complaints about the way that sensor rendered when it was the latest and greatest, so this new narrative about it being the lost holy grail of fuji sensors is baffling and hilarious.

Does anyone have examples of this? I have never seen this with my x-t1.

Here’s a thread I posted way back in 2016 with a comparison of the X-Pro1 vs XE2 (same as XT1) for low light skin tones in JPEG’s - https://www.dpreview.com/forums/thread/4097752

The whole “waxy skintones” issue was very widely discussed back in the day and there will be many other examples on the forum.

Interesting. Thanks for the link. It seems the "waxy skintones" effect only applies to high iso jpegs shot in low light - which I haven't noticed since I only use the raw files.

 Ulrik Christiansen's gear list:Ulrik Christiansen's gear list
Fujifilm X-T20 Fujifilm X-T3 Fujifilm XF 35mm F1.4 R Fujifilm XF 27mm F2.8 Fujifilm XF 56mm F1.2 R +3 more
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