Adding a basic noise/film grain effect is really simple and only 2 steps are needed:

1- New Layer

Create a new layer (Shift+Cmd+N Shift+Ctrl+N) and choose a blend mode of Overlay and select the Fill with Overlay neutral color option.

Now you have a gray layer on top of your image, but you can’t see it, thanks to the Overlay blend mode.

New overlay layer with with neutral gray
50% gray layer on top

2- Adding Noise

Go to Filter > Noise > Add Noise, make sure the distribution is set to Gaussian and check the Monochromatic option. Monochromatic will ensure that the grain doesn’t have any color to it, and the Gaussian distribution will randomize the way the grain is laid out, instead of being in a predictable pattern.

Now just play around with the amount slider until you get something that looks good to your eyes.

Add noise dialog
Adding some film grain

And that’s all there is to it, simple enough! 👍


Extra Tip #1: Add Film Grain Last

Extra Tip: for best results, a little bit like with sharpening, add the grain as the last step in your retouching to your already resized images. Otherwise, the correct amount of grain won’t always look the greatest when you then reduce the size of the image by a lot after the fact.

Extra Tip #2: Smart Objects

Transform the gray layer to a smart object before applying the noise and you’ll be able to change the amount after the fact instead of having to recreate the noise if you later decide you want to increate or decrease the amount.

To transform the layer to a smart object, just right-click on the layer and then select Convert to Smart Object.

Once you have a smart object layer that has some noise applied, you can double-click on the Add Noise part of the layer to access the Add Noise dialog and change the amount.

Smart object
Smart objects for the win!