View allAll Photos Tagged polaroidlandcamera
This didn't really work. The originals were underexposed and the bottom pair basically bleached out completely during the lift. And again the metallic paper doesn't really scan well.
Polaroid SX-70 Alpha1 SE, Impossible PX600 Silver Shade COOL emulsion transfer.
Polaroid SX-70 Model 2 Land Camera, Impossible Project PX 680 First Flush film.
Las Vegas, NV.
'Roid Week Day #2. (Was late to post for day #1).
Polaroid SX-70 Model 2, Impossible Project PX680 first flush film.
Las Vegas, NV
Photographed with a Polaroid Automatic 250 Land Camera using a Kali-Copier attachment. Fujifilm FP-100C Instant Pack film.
This is the "Polaroid Time-Zero OneStep (SX-70 Rainbow)" camera, it is a Polaroid Land Camera that was produced by Polaroid in 1981.
This is a classic example of a Polaroid instant camera from the 1980s. The body of the camera is made entirely out of plastic. The camera features a 1 element plastic lens with a fixed aperture (f/14). An exposure compensation control dial which is combined with an “electronic eye” (light sensor) located on the front of the camera. The camera would have originally came bundled with the "Polaroid Flash Array"; which was a row of miniature flashbulbs that would have attached to the top of the camera (although other flash devices were also available at the time; such as the "Polaroid Q-light" flash attachment) This camera was meant as a replacement for the original "OneStep", which was produced from 1977 to 1980. The original "Polaroid OneStep SX-70" features a white face plate, while the later version (the "Time-Zero" shown above) had an all black chassis; both versions featured the classic Polaroid "Rainbow" stripe on the front of the camera.
The camera would have originally used Polaroid's SX-70 instant film; which is no longer produced by Polaroid. However, the SX-70 film can still be obtained through "The Impossible Project" website. The main breakthrough with the SX-70 film pack was that it allowed for a much faster development time, hence the name "Time-Zero". It also reportedly featured richer and brighter colors than pervious instant films. An interesting fact about the SX-70 series is that the actual "battery" for the camera is contained within the film pack itself. The "PolaPulse" battery is simply a thin flat 6 volt zinc-chloride battery; which was responsible for powering the internal electronics. Which includes the motors, exposure control, and light sensor; as well as signalling flash device to fire.
A PDF version of the manual for the "Time-Zero StepOne" can be found at:
www.cameramanuals.org/polaroid_pdf/polaroid_one_step_sx70... (Part 1)
www.cameramanuals.org/polaroid_pdf/polaroid_one_step_sx70... (Part 2)
Polaroid SX-70 Land Camera Model 1 + Expired 600 Film + ND Filter.
Pola No 60.
Taken during our Kent/East Sussex break at the end of the summer...
For information on the 'headland' area of Dungeness look here, but if you want to know about Dungeness B, the nuclear power station sited on the headland, then look here.
Polaroid SX-70 Land Camera Model 1 + Expired 600 Film + ND Filter.
Pola No 51.
Taken during our Kent/East Sussex break at the end of the summer...
For more information on the De La Warr Pavilion, look here.
I'm waiting to get some film back from the lab so I used LeakLite to play with some stuff. This is a shot from my Polaroid 440 that I thought could use some colorplay.
Polaroid 440 Automatic Land Camera, Fujifilm FP-100C
for the thematorium contest "modern design classic"
danbo and the vintage plastic beauty.
friends from the netherlands sent me this pola 1000 (this is what they do with every old cam they get hold of ; ) some month ago. i learned, it´s the international model of the original onestep. i haven´t run a pack through it yet, but i have no doubt she´s still working. as with most of the plastic bodied onesteps, prontos and prestos of the late seventies, i like the simple and yet somehow smart design. an icon of it´s time i assume.
Hwy 162 Bridge over Lake Oroville
We went to check out the Lake Oroville water levels on Sunday afternoon. Right after I shot this photo, we got caught up in the Mandatory Evacuation of ~188,000 people.
This due to, the at the time Eminent failure of the emergency spillway on the Lake Oroville Dam . It was very nerve wracking making our exodus, with multiple accidents, abandoned cars on the freeway, emergency vehicles racing down the freeway's left shoulder, people walking on the freeway's right shoulder and numerous helicopters overhead.
Fortunately we made it home safe. What is normally a 35min drive took over 2hrs.
Camera Polaroid Land 250
Film Fuji FP 100c
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117. - Ligaments of Wrist and Hand. Anterior View.
Original photograph taken with a Polaroid SX-70 Alpha1 SE using Impossible Project PX680 instant film.
Emulsion transfer onto heavyweight matt laser print of a scan from Gray's Anatomy 1st edition reprint.