Vintage Photo Filter

Add nostalgic film effects with sepia tones, grain, and vignette options

Vintage Filter

How to Use Vintage Filter

  1. 1 Upload one or multiple photos
  2. 2 Choose a vintage preset (Sepia, Film, Polaroid, Faded)
  3. 3 Adjust grain, vignette, output format and quality
  4. 4 Download vintage images (ZIP for multiple)

What You Get

Collection of vintage presets inspired by classic film stocks. Supports batch processing up to 50 images.

Input: Modern digital photo

Output: 1970s Polaroid-style instant photo look

Input: 30 wedding photos

Output: Batch Sepia filter applied, downloaded as ZIP

How do I make a photo look vintage?

Choose a vintage preset (Sepia, Film, Polaroid, Faded), adjust grain and vignette to taste, then download. Each preset mimics a different era of photography.

What is the difference between vintage presets?

Sepia: 1900s warm brown tones. Polaroid: 1970s instant camera fade. Film: 1990s color film look. Faded: washed-out, low-contrast aesthetic.

How do I add film grain to photos?

Enable the grain option and adjust intensity. Film grain adds random texture that simulates analog photography. Higher grain = more visible texture.

What does vignette do to a photo?

Vignette darkens the corners and edges, drawing the viewer's eye toward the center. Common in vintage photography due to lens characteristics.

How do I create Instagram-style vintage filters?

Use the Faded preset with slight vignette for the popular washed-out Instagram aesthetic. Adjust warmth and contrast for the specific look you want.

Can I make photos look like old Polaroids?

Yes. Use the Polaroid preset which adds the characteristic color shifts, slight fade, and warm tones of 1970s instant photography.

How do I batch apply vintage effects?

Upload up to 50 images. Select your preset and settings, then process all at once. Download as a ZIP file for wedding or event photo sets.

Can I combine vintage effects with black and white?

Use the Sepia preset for warm-toned monochrome, or apply B&W conversion first (in the B&W tab), then add grain and vignette here.

All processing happens locally in your browser. Your images never leave your device.