Published: September 16, 2025
What is Sepia tone photography? Definition & Meaning
Sepia tone photography is a style of image processing that gives photographs a warm brown tint in place of true black and white. It began as a chemical print-toning method in the 1800s and today appears as a digital effect. Sepia alters the final image by replacing metallic silver with longer-lasting silver sulfide compounds, which softens contrast and changes the overall tone. The name “sepia” comes from a reddish-brown pigment made from cuttlefish ink. As the process became more common, the color became associated with historical or vintage photographs.
Sepia isn’t a single color; it’s a range of tones.

Everyone seems to have an idea of what sepia color is, probably from seeing old photos of ancestors. But in reality, sepia isn’t a fixed color; it’s a range of warm tones that depend on how the effect is created.
In traditional darkroom printing, different toners produce different sepia looks:
- Sodium sulfide toner: Strong, deep brown (classic sepia)
- Thiourea toner: Can be adjusted for lighter or more reddish hues
- Polysulfide toner: Sometimes gives a bronze or silvery tone
- Split toning (manual): Creates cooler shadows and warmer highlights — not strictly sepia, but related
These differences affect how dark the shadows are, how warm the highlights look, and whether the photo leans toward chocolate, bronze, or even gray-brown.
…the same goes for digital post-processing
In Lightroom, Photoshop, or camera presets:
- Some filters are very brown, mimicking traditional darkroom sepia
- Others apply a very subtle warmth to black-and-white (near-monochrome)
- Split toning can be applied digitally too — for example, warm highlights + cool shadows (popular in cinematic grading)
History of Sepia Tone in Photography
Sepia tone started as a chemical process used in black-and-white darkroom printing. The goal was to improve archival stability and give prints a more pleasing, warm tone. Over time, the look became linked with memory, history, and nostalgia.
Photographers used different chemical formulas to achieve sepia tone. Sodium sulfide created deep brown tones but had a strong odor. Thiourea was cleaner and allowed more control over the final tone. Some toners, like polysulfide, could be applied without bleaching the print first.
The process usually involved three steps: bleaching the original black-and-white print, rinsing it, and applying toner to convert the silver into silver sulfide. This made the image more stable and less likely to fade.
Visual Effects of Sepia Tone on Photos
Sepia tone changes how a photo feels. The soft brown tint lowers contrast and makes images seem more emotional or distant. You can use this effect to shape the tone of your image in subtle ways.
In portrait photography, sepia makes skin tones look smoother and less clinical. It’s also great for adding a vintage vibe.

For landscapes, sepia tends to soften textures and reduce visual harshness. It can also make a landscape seem more barren and emotional distant through nostalgia.

In street photography, it adds a sense of distance, making the scene feel older or more reflective. The overall result is a warmer, quieter image that feels more personal or nostalgic. By softening contrast and removing modern colors, sepia tone makes the photo feel like a memory instead of a moment. This shift helps the viewer reflect rather than just observe.

By muting harsh blacks and whites, sepia gives photos a timeless, reflective mood that’s useful in many creative settings.
How to Apply Sepia Tone in Photography
You can apply sepia tone through darkroom processing or in editing software. The goal in both cases is to replace the neutral grayscale with a warm brown tone that shifts the mood of the image.
In analog photography, you start by bleaching the black-and-white print (usually with potassium ferricyanide). After rinsing out the bleach, you treat the image with sepia toner, which converts the silver into silver sulfide. The print is then washed and dried. If done correctly, the result is warm, rich, and archival.
How to Make Sepia Color in Adobe Lightroom or Photoshop
In digital, the process is faster. You can choose a sepia preset in Lightroom or Photoshop, or apply a sepia mode directly in-camera. For more control, you can adjust the color balance manually.
The process is very similar in both apps:
- Make the photo black-and-white
- Go to the midtones color wheel and set the dot towards the 2 o’clock position. The more you move the dot from the center position, the stronger the sepia tone will get.
You can also combine sepia tone with film grain or fading effects to simulate the look of an older photograph.
Sepia Tone vs Black-and-White Photography
Both sepia and black-and-white remove color, but the results feel different. Black-and-white is high in contrast and often feels colder or more graphic. Sepia is softer and warmer, with a tone that feels more reflective or nostalgic.
In black-and-white, shadows and highlights pop with clarity. Sepia lowers that contrast and shifts the emotion. Use black-and-white when you want a sharp, modern edge. Use sepia when you want to suggest memory, history, or emotional distance.
Summing Up
Sepia tone photography adds a warm brown tint to black-and-white images by replacing metallic silver with silver sulfide or simulating the effect digitally. The tone softens contrast, adds warmth, and makes photos look older or more reflective. By removing strong blacks and shifting the color to warm brown, sepia tone makes the image feel like a memory instead of a moment. Originally a chemical process, sepia is now a common digital tool used to suggest time, nostalgia, or memory in both still images and visual storytelling.
Read Next: Want to level up your photography skills?
Explore our Photography section for guides on lighting, composition, camera settings, and creative techniques across genres like portrait, landscape, and street.
Whether you’re shooting on a mirrorless camera or your phone, you’ll find sharp, practical tips to take more intentional and creative photos.
Also check out our Visual Composition section, with deep dives into framing, color psychology, and visual art history—key tools for any photographer thinking like an image-maker.
