FreeHeadshot logo
FreeHeadshot.org

Magazine-grade · Editorial

70s Film AI Headshot

Warm Ektachrome grain

The 70s Film headshot puts you in 70s-influenced wardrobe in warm earth tones, set against soft warm wood-panel or warm earth-toned interior, slightly faded vintage feel. We light it with warm tungsten-balanced key from camera-left, hazy slightly-diffused quality, single soft round catchlight and grade it kodak Ektachrome 70s palette, warm amber midtones, slightly faded blacks, visible film grain, slight halation in highlights, nostalgic Polaroid feel. It reads as warm ektachrome grain, and it's generated from a single selfie in about 60 seconds.

70s Film AI headshot example — Warm Ektachrome grain
AI-generated example

The 70s Film look, in detail

Here's exactly how the studio builds this look. You don't need to own any of it, just upload a selfie.

Wardrobe
70s-influenced wardrobe in warm earth tones
Setting & background
soft warm wood-panel or warm earth-toned interior, slightly faded vintage feel
Lighting
warm tungsten-balanced key from camera-left, hazy slightly-diffused quality, single soft round catchlight
Lens & framing
50mm at f/2, vintage anamorphic feel, gentle softness
Color & finish
Kodak Ektachrome 70s palette, warm amber midtones, slightly faded blacks, visible film grain, slight halation in highlights, nostalgic Polaroid feel
Expression & pose
warm easy expression with subtle Duchenne smile, vintage portrait energy

Who picks the 70s Film look

Cover-worthy portraits with the studio lighting, lens choice, and tonal grade that magazine portraiture is built on. Gallery white, warm narrative editorial, hyperreal pop, cinematic noir, and more. If that's the impression you want to give, this is your style. It pairs well with our professional headshot generator and AI profile picture generator.

How to generate it

  1. Open the studio and upload one clear selfie.
  2. Pick the 70s Film style (it's pre-selected from this page).
  3. Get 3 free headshots in about 60 seconds. See how it works.

What the 70s Film pack delivers

  • 3 studio-quality headshots free per day, watermarked
  • ~60-second generation from one selfie, no model training, no 20-photo upload
  • Identity preserved across every frame (face, ethnicity, glasses, hijab, mobility aids)
  • $19 unlocks 100 photos in this style plus every other style (100+ total), Full HD, no watermark, commercial license
  • Photos auto-deleted within 24h; no face embeddings retained
  • 24-hour refund window — eligible if you've used 3 or fewer photos

How 70s Film compares

Not sure 70s Film is the one? In the same editorial family, people also weigh Magazine Cover (glossy editorial cover), Vintage Hollywood (1940s view-camera b&w), Cinematic Noir (teal + amber blockbuster). The good news: with the $19 pack you get all of them, so you don't have to choose. Browse the full 100+ style catalog.

More in Editorial

70s Film headshots: FAQ

Is the 70s Film style free?

Yes. You get 3 watermarked 70s Film headshots a day for free, with no signup and no credit card. The one-time packs ($9 for 30 photos, $19 for 100 in Full HD, $49 for 300) remove the watermark and unlock all 100+ styles.

How many photos do I upload for a 70s Film headshot?

Just one selfie. FreeHeadshot runs on Google Gemini 2.5 Flash Image, which reads your face straight from a single photo, so there's no model training and no 20-photo upload. You can add up to 5 for slightly better results.

What should I wear for the 70s Film look?

Nothing special. We render 70s-influenced wardrobe in warm earth tones for you, so upload any clear, well-lit selfie and we handle the wardrobe, lighting, and setting.

How long does it take, and where can I use my 70s Film headshot?

About 60 seconds for the free 3-pack. The 70s Film look is built for LinkedIn, resumes, team pages, and social profiles. It is not valid for passports or government ID, which require an unedited photograph.

Generate your 70s Film headshot in 60 seconds.

No signup, no credit card for the first three. Pay $19 once if you love them.

Open the Studio