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Polaroid SX-70 Alpha1 SE, Impossible Color SX70 film, Color Frames Edition (2nds)
Polaroid Week | Autumn 2017 | Day 6 | 1/2
So I'll go but we know I'll see you down the line.
And we'll hate what we've lost, but we'll love what we find.
And I'm feeling fine; we've made it to the coastline.
The above is a Polaroid 95B LandCamera circa 1957-1961, and the below is a Polaroid Sun660 circa 1978-1986.
+ in comments. I hate how you can see my scars in this one. I tried cropping out my legs but it threw the composition out of balance.
Floyd's 7th birthday is Tuesday, June 29th, but I thought I'd celebrate all week.
Hard to believe he'll be 7! It was an August day of 2003 when I first laid my eyes on the wee pup at a local feed shop, "Horses 'R Us".
After seeing their "Chihuahuas for sale" sign out front, on impulse I pulled over and met the cutest puppy I've ever seen. He was in a bin with 2 of his siblings.
So tiny! He fit in the palm of my hand. When they took him out of the bin, he promptly, confidently in all of his 24 oz. glory, walked over to a daschund sitting nearby, the owner's pet, and bopped him on the nose.
I said, "I've got to have this dog. I'm going to the bank right now. I'll be right back."
The rest is history. Happy birthday to my littlest pal.
Note: This is the most Floyds ever in one photo! A septuple exposure with a hand held flash.
Negative 1 - my teen darkroom students with film cameras outside the Morean Arts Center.
recovered FP-100c negative. bleached and scanned.
CAMERA: Polaroid Land Camera 195
FILM: Fuji FP-100c (expired 8/2014)
DATE SHOT: 10/28/19
SCANNER: Epson V700 w/ VueScan
(Monday, 22 March 2010) Today was a special day. Not because the ice has almost completely melted off the lake or that it marked the one year anniversary of posting my first photo to Flickr. Rather it was the exciting news that came out of New York: The Impossible Project has successfully reinvented instant integral film! Funny thing is, I didn’t even own a single Polaroid camera when the ice formed on the lake. Today I own fifteen. I am so grateful to have been introduced to this medium and I am even more grateful that The Impossible Project will allow me to indulge in it even more.
Sx-70 Polaroid Land camera Onestep Sonar.
Impossible projekt film.
Scanned with Epson Perfection V700.
Polaroid 340 Land Camera // Fujifilm FP-100c.
From the first pack of film in the Polaroid. Coldwater Lake, MI, May 2013.
December 27, 2012
Polaroid SX-70
Impossible Project PX70 Color Protection
Way back during Christmas break we were lucky enough to get some snow. I took a walk through the park at Grand Caverns as I usually do when it snows. Whenever it snows this park looks like a scene out of Narnia.
July 13, 2012
Polaroid 420 Automatic Land Camera
Fuji FP-3000b
Here's a single tree that overhangs on the pond once owned by my great grandfather, now by my uncle.
I took the negative and inverted it and rotated it, then converted to black and white and added a cream tone. Feel it looks better than the positive image.
normally it's much cooler in February- averaging somewhere in the 40s-50s by day. Today it was 79 degrees and felt so summery that Chad put the baby pool up out back.
"Papers? I don't need no stinkin' papers!" -
Floyd, a Mexican born in the USA, vetoes Arizona's new law.
I saw a Facebook group today called “Boycott Arizona”, and felt like I should let folks know not all Arizonans support the new law signed by Governor Jan Brewer last week. The law, a hot topic that has polarized much of the state, is currently the strictest immigration control measures in the US, allowing and encouraging police to request documentation from anyone they suspect may be here illegally.
So basically, it legalizes racial profiling. The federal government has given very little thought to viable solutions on illegal immigration, so now individual states are taking a crack at it, at the risk of disastrous results.
This is an embarrassing black eye for Arizona, a state I’ve lived in for 15 years and dearly love. Makes us look like a bunch of backwards fools. Never have fully grasped the politics here, being a Chicago Democrat at heart—but I’m always willing to listen to opinions different than my own. This new ruling is against basic civil rights. It promotes hatred, racism, fascism.
Arizona has only been a state for 98 years. Before that, it was a territory, and before that it was part of Mexico. There are generations of Arizona-born U.S. citizens with Mexican heritage that extend back far longer than most of us more recent arrivals.
Jan Brewer was not elected-- she was appointed when Janet Napolitano, our popular 2 term Democratic governor was selected for Obama’s cabinet, as Secretary of Homeland Security. Napolitano vetoed this same bill the first time it came up. She was also savvy about tourism’s importance in our state, unlike Brewer who has cut Arizona Office of Tourism’s budget by 70%, and closed half a dozen state parks. Jan Brewer is causing damage that will have a lingering impact long after she’s out of office, leaving a wake of bad publicity, boycotts, and negative feelings for the beautiful state of Arizona.
I am more frightened of the Arizona lawmakers than any illegal immigrant. Besides that, this says nothing about natural born Americans with Mexican heritage who are now targets of the police for no other reason than their heritage.
The irony of it all? The part that makes me laugh? Maybe the Navajo, Hopi, Yavapai Apache, Supai, Tohono O’Odham and Pima Indians ought to start asking all of us for our documentation!
Testing out my first pack of PX70 COOL film! I'm loving every aspect of it!
Polaroid SX-70 Sears Special
Impossible Project PX70 COOL
(No film packs were hurt in the making of this photograph)
Lagos
All of these shots were taken standing on a high speed road on a bridge. As a result they tend to lack accuracy because i was scared of getting run over.
All the errors too!!!!
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