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I Made My Phone Photos Look Like Analog Film. Here's How You Can, Too
Andrew Lanxon · 2026-04-22 · via CNET

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Our expert, award-winning staff selects the products we cover and rigorously researches and tests our top picks. If you buy through our links, we may get a commission. How we test phones

The "film look" is in, but you don't need a film camera to get it -- your phone can take great analog-inspired images. Here's how.

Headshot of Andrew Lanxon

When he's not testing the latest phones or phone cameras, Andrew can normally be found with his own camera in hand or behind his drums or eating his stash of home-cooked food -- sometimes all at once.

Expertise Smartphones, photography, iOS, Android, gaming, outdoor pursuits. Credentials

  • Shortlisted for British Photography Awards 2022, Commended in Landscape Photographer of the Year 2022

The dreamy vintage film look in photography is wildly popular on social media and has been for some time. While many photographers -- myself included -- have turned to analog cameras loaded with endless rolls of Kodak Gold, you can achieve those retro film vibes by simply using your phone. And the best thing is it doesn't require you to have the absolute latest iPhone or Android phone, or even specialized camera apps with expensive monthly subscriptions. Most filmic imagery eschews the clinical accuracy and oversharpened look of modern digital cameras in favor of a softer, more natural aesthetic. So more megapixels and the sharpest pro lenses won't help you here, and it means that even older phones can take some beautiful shots.

You can transform your photos with little more than your phone's default camera app and a few minutes in a free editing app. Let's dive in and get shooting.

An image of two giraffes

Enlarge Image

An image of two giraffes

My phone captured a dark image of these giraffes but just a few minutes in an editing app allowed me to create something beautifully filmic.

Andrew Lanxon/CNET

Taking your photos

While most of today's phone cameras can take vibrant, well-exposed images, they all rely on image processing software to squeeze the most out of their relatively tiny image sensors. Unfortunately, it's not always done effectively, with many phones going overboard on the processing, resulting in fake-looking images with unnatural-looking highlights and shadows and crunchy details.

This process aims to strip back some of that digital oversharpening and HDR toning to produce an image that's closer in feel to what you might expect to get from a real film camera. There's a lot you can do to help that.

An image of a phone with a filter over the camera.

Enlarge Image

An image of a phone with a filter over the camera.

PolarPro's CineGold mist filter can help create an authentically filmic-looking bloom to your phone photos.

Andrew Lanxon/CNET

The first approach harkens back to traditional photography: use a physical filter in front of the camera lens. Specifically, a mist filter can soften harsh details while also adding a natural 'bloom' to highlights, which can add to the filmic vibe we're trying to achieve. 

I use mist filters in most of my photography, especially PolarPro's CineGold filter, which adds a warm glow to images, and the CineBlack which subtly deepens shadows while adding highlight bloom. I use these with my Leica Q3 43 but they work just the same on your phone -- you just need an adapter like Moment's QuickLock filter mount that lets you slap any 63mm threaded photo filter onto your phone. PolarPro does make filters specifically for the iPhone (seen above) but my advice would be to buy regular circular threaded filters that you can use on any phone or camera. 

Moment also makes various lenses that can clip to your phone and I like the effect they give, too. While they're optically quite sharp, they do add a certain natural degradation (including softening of some harsh details and some optical aberration) to the image that again just helps reduce that oversharpened digital look. 

I typically shoot using ProRaw on the iPhone or in DNG raw on most Android phones to give me the most flexibility in editing (as well as bypassing much of the auto sharpening many phones will apply in the default mode), but you can get great results just using default settings in your camera. 

I do find I get the best results when I slightly over-expose the image (usually by tapping and pulling up the brightness slider). Many film stocks -- including Kodak Gold and Portra 400 -- often look their best when shot in bright outdoor scenes (think a California beach or an alpine mountain top under bright skies) so leaning into a brighter look when taking your image can be helpful when you're at the editing stage. And by shooting in raw, there's enough dynamic range to work with so I'm not blowing out the brightest areas of the image to white.

Otherwise it's down to you to take a good photo that you then want to give a nice filmic flair to. Remember to concentrate on capturing a good photo in the moment, rather than just snapping away and hoping to pull back something usable later using editing. If you're keen to really take your phone photography skills further, I have a tutorial for you that will help

Using your phone's built-in presets

Most phones offer presets that change the look of your images. Apple's Photographic Styles in recent iPhones allow you to switch up the colors and saturation in your photos before and after taking them. If you just want to play with colors in your images then it's a good starting point but I wouldn't say that any of them especially look like analog film. (And Photographic Styles only work when you're shooting in HEIF or JPEG, not ProRaw.)

Side by side images of a riverfront

Enlarge Image

Side by side images of a riverfront

Samsung's My Filter tool (available on all recent Galaxy phones) can do a good job of helping you create that filmic vibe.

Andrew Lanxon/CNET

Samsung's My Filter tool allows you to essentially steal the color tones from other images. While I sometimes find the results a bit underwhelming, I have had some success with it, especially when I use the built-in editing tools on top of this to add film grain and adjust the colors further. 

Other phones -- including the Xiaomi 15 Ultra and OnePlus 15 -- also come with various looks baked into the phone. They're certainly worth experimenting with, although most of my success in creating a film look comes from editing apps rather than from the phone itself. 

Edit your phone photos to look like film

When I'm editing, I'm not trying to mimic a particular film stock like Kodak Gold or CineStill 800T. Instead, I'm just trying to achieve what feels like an authentically vintage film aesthetic. 

A hand holding a phone

Enlarge Image

A hand holding a phone

Snapseed has various film looks you can apply to your photos and they're all free.

Andrew Lanxon/CNET

There are numerous apps on the iOS App store and the Google Play store that offer various film simulations and vintage effects. Personally, I've not found many that I especially like but some particular one are worth highlighting. 

First is VSCO, which has a long history of producing a variety of filmic styles that the company says are based on real film stocks. I've used VSCO's desktop presets for many years and they're certainly some of the best around, so if you want a fast way of slapping a film look over your image, VSCO is worth a look -- although you'll need to pay a subscription to access the whole collection. 

Next is Adobe Lightroom, which remains a photography industry staple and works just as well on phones as it does on desktop computers. While you can edit your images in an infinite number of ways to create the look you want, to save some time a huge variety of presets are available that you can install that will give you instant access to beautiful colors in just one tap. 

Moment has its own store jammed with preset packs that can be used in Lightroom, bringing filmic vibes to images taken with your phone or with any digital camera. They can be pricey extras but they're well worth experimenting with if you take your photography more seriously. The aforementioned VSCO has just released its own pack of Lightroom filmic presets, available for all paid subscribers to download and install. I've used them and while they're designed to work with 'regular' cameras from Canon, Leica etc., I've still had good results when using them on ProRaw iPhone images, including on the image of the fence above.

But my personal suggestion, especially if you don't want to shell out any cash, is to use Google's app Snapseed. It's free on Android and iOS, and has a whole suite of advanced photo editing tools, including numerous film looks, with some that directly aim to mimic real film stocks. I like swiping through the looks, testing each one out to see how it feels with my image before applying it. 

Image of a photo editing app on a phone

There's a vast array of filmic presets available for Adobe Lightroom if you want to buy specific looks for your images.

Andrew Lanxon/CNET

I'll also apply quite a heavy amount of grain to simulate the natural grain seen in analog film, which also helps reduce the digital sharpness. I'll also go into the Details tool and reduce the structure and ensure sharpening is set to 0. Other things in Snapseed that can add to the effect using the Dehaze tool to reduce sharpness, the Adjust tool to reduce Ambience and add a touch blur with the Lens Blur tool. 

I love using Snapseed, because I can go back to different tools and layer the effect again and again, resulting in a photo with a color style that's uniquely my own. It's one of the most well-rounded photo editors out there and it's amazing that it's free. 

Editing in this way really comes down to what I feel has the right 'vibes' rather than it being color matched to how Kodak or Fujifilm renders different colors. It's all about personal preference here so I encourage you to play around as much as you want to find what looks best to you. 

I've Taken Hundreds of Photos With the Oppo Find X9 Pro. These Are My Faves

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Headshot of Andrew Lanxon

Editor at Large; Lead Photographer, Europe

When he's not testing the latest phones or phone cameras, Andrew can normally be found with his own camera in hand or behind his drums or eating his stash of home-cooked food -- sometimes all at once.