Fujifilm Pro 400H

The beloved Fuji portrait film — discontinued but not forgotten

C-41 Color Negative ISO 400 C-41 Process FUJIFILM Discontinued

Color Palette

Cool, pastel palette — ethereal softness

Specifications

ManufacturerFujifilm (Japan)
Film TypeColor negative
ISO Speed400
ProcessC-41
GrainFine — Fuji Sigma grain technology
Exposure LatitudeWide and forgiving, best slightly overexposed
Color PaletteCool, pastel — soft tones with excellent skin rendition
Available FormatsDiscontinued — was 35mm, 120

Reciprocity Failure Calculator

When exposures exceed one second, Fujifilm Pro 400H requires additional time to compensate for reciprocity failure. This calculator remains useful for photographers shooting remaining expired stock.

Corrected time: seconds
corrected = metered1.25

Reciprocity exponent from Fujifilm technical data

Push & Pull Processing

Pro 400H performed best at box speed or slightly overexposed. It handled push and pull processing similarly to other professional color negative films. For remaining expired stock, overexposing is recommended to compensate for age-related speed loss.

RatingEffective ISOStopsNotes
Pull −2100−2Very soft, pastel rendering — dreamy portraits
Pull −1200−1Smoother tones, popular for golden hour portraits
Box Speed4000Normal development
Push +1800+1Slight grain increase, cooler tone shift
Push +21600+2Noticeable grain, increased contrast
Push +33200+3Heavy grain, significant contrast — rarely used

Character & Personality

Grain

Fine grain using Fuji's Sigma grain technology, their equivalent of Kodak's T-GRAIN. The RMS granularity rating of 4 was comparable to Fuji Superia 400, though some photographers noted it appeared slightly coarser than Portra 400 in direct comparisons. In 120 format, grain was essentially invisible.

Exposure Latitude

Wide and forgiving, typical of professional color negative films. Pro 400H handled 2-3 stops of overexposure and 1-2 stops of underexposure well. It performed best when slightly overexposed, which produced smoother tones and better color rendition.

Color Palette

Soft, pastel tones with a slightly cool/neutral color palette compared to Kodak Portra's warmth. Known for excellent skin tone reproduction with a cooler bias than Portra. Blues and greens were more prominent in the Fuji palette. The film excelled under mixed lighting and fluorescent light thanks to its unique fourth color-sensitive layer technology, which Fujifilm developed specifically for accurate color reproduction under challenging lighting conditions. The "Fuji look" influenced countless digital presets and filters.

Best Suited For

  • Portrait photography with cool, neutral palette
  • Wedding photography — beloved by wedding photographers worldwide
  • Fashion and editorial work
  • Mixed or fluorescent lighting situations
  • Outdoor photography where cool, pastel tones are desired

Available Formats & Pricing

FormatApprox. Price
Expired stock (35mm)$30-60+ USD (collector pricing)
Expired stock (120)$25-50+ USD (collector pricing)

Prices reflect discontinued/collector market only. Fresh stock is no longer available. Current as of early 2026.

Development Notes

Standard C-41 processing — no special handling required. For expired stock, rate at box speed or slightly overexpose; cold-stored stock holds up reasonably well. The fourth layer technology means color correction behavior may differ from Kodak films in post-processing. Expired stock may show color shifts, especially if not stored in cold conditions. Some labs report inconsistent results from very old or improperly stored stock. Fujifilm announced the discontinuation of Pro 400H in January 2021 in both 35mm and 120 formats across all markets, citing difficulty in procuring key raw materials. As of mid-2025, Fujifilm confirmed the film has not returned despite website listing errors.

Shoot Fujifilm Pro 400H with TLR Companion

TLR Companion is a free light meter app with built-in reciprocity correction for Fujifilm Pro 400H and 21 other film stocks. Meter your exposures accurately with camera-specific settings for 48 TLR cameras.