View allAll Photos Tagged polaroidlandcamera
On worldwide pinhole photography day.
Caumasee, Flims, Switzerland.
Polaroid 320 Automatic Land Camera, Fuji FP-100c film.
#16 August 19, 2012
Polaroid SX-70 Sears Special
Impossible Project PX70 COOL
Right before I left for school over a month ago we really began our canning process. Since then we've stored an unimaginable amount of beans, tomatoes, blackberries, corn, and many other things. Once this process begins, it's a sign that the season is beginning to come to a close.
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.
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this property is in dispute. No matter how hard the fight is, and I will put one up, this property is going to be warehouses. The richest soil in the world paved over for warehouses. This land once was the farm of a man who came here along the oregon trail with the man who "founded" our town. (There were already Indians here) This farm was where 5 generations of the same family grew Daffodil and Tulip bulbs and we hold a parade every year to honor this. This is the place where my great grandfather worked for a little while during the depression to help feed his family, where my grandmother picked blueberries to earn money for school clothes, where my father bought me my favorite berries when I was a little one, where I now trespass and take pictures and pick those feral blueberries because nobody else is.
I will fight. I know my chances are insanely slim, but if I don't fight what else will they pave thinking nobody cares?
alternate title:: the pola / nikon shootout {see his in comments}
finally learned how to scan my polaroid shots; this has no edits at all; simply scanned in and uploaded.
i ♥ it.
ordered some fuji fp100c and polaroid 690 film for paula today. yay! i'm getting the hang of her.
I was at Loncon3 - the World Science Fiction Convention - last week and was strolling around the docks near the ExCeL early in the mornings. By accident I managed to capture this dimensional rift in the sky.
Polaroid SX-70 Alpha1 SE, Impossible PX100 Silver Shade COOL.
Polaroid SX-70 Land Camera Model 1 + ATZ.
Artistic Time Zero from the Impossible Project - this scan taken within a couple of hours of the shot, and matched as closely as possible to the colours on the original Polaroid. It looked almost as if it had solarised when it first emerged from the camera, strange indeed!
The Gentleman Amateur came to Bristol, so Bingo Little & ξαβλ joined us for a flickr-walk. :)
My grandmother suffers from Alzheimer’s and my days spent with her lead me to believe this photo best represents the world in which she lives in now.
Camera: Polaroid Land Camera
Film: Fuji FP-3000B
Block on Columbus Ave between West Springfield and Claremont Park Taken with my first roll of expired Polaroid film: 108 expired 2/96 one of a double pack I got off of E-Bay and #585 UV filter.
I'm in love!
Vintage 1970s Polaroid One Step Land Camera
w/ Rare matching Q-light flash.
Great condition.
Shoots with expired SX-70 film. Or improved SX-70 Blend.
Shot with an Olympus E-500.
Cheerful, kindliness, friendly ladies from Taipei. Very glad can meet you all. : )
Rolleiflex 2.8F Planar w/filter + Fomapan400
© All rights reserved 2014. Please do not use my images without my explicit permission. : )
A few of my favorite photos that were taken with FP3000b a few years back, I miss that film so much.
(Friday, 2 April 2010) After visiting The Impossible Project, I wandered over to the Brooklyn Bridge. It was crowded, but I still thoroughly enjoyed my first walk on the bridge.
My new toy
A polaroid 195 Land Camera...from the 70's
This is a fully manual polaroid with a much better lens than most polaroid Land cameras
it folds up and collapses into its hard shell
It takes Fuji Instant film which is still in production, so is still fully usable
Fun fun fun
192. - The Internal Maxillary Artery, and its Branches.
Original photograph taken with a Polaroid Sonar Autofocus 5000 using Impossible Project PX100 Silver Shade test film.
Emulsion transfer onto heavyweight matt inkjet print of a scan from Gray's Anatomy 1st edition reprint.
What a sweet sight. And a gift of a nuzzle, and this photo.
Bleached/reclaimed Fuji FP 100C negative.
Polaroid Automatic 103 Land Camera.
Off of Summer Street In South Boston. August 25, '12. Taken with my Polaroid 100 Land Camera using Fujifilm FP-100c. One hash mark towards Darken
Camera: Polaroid 104 Land Camera
Film: Fuji FP-100C Silk
The Flash didn't fire but to me the image looks interesting.
Camera: Polaroid Land Camera 450 (1971 - 1974)
Film: Fujifilm FP-3000b
Process: Scanned Negative, Epson Perfection V600 Photo
This is the "Polaroid Colorpack II" camera; it is a Polaroid Land Camera that was produced by Polaroid from 1969 to 1972. The Colorpack II quickly became popular with consumers due to its low price (originally $30 USD), as well as the improved color capabilities of Polaroid 100 series pack film.
Unlike most Polaroid Land cameras of the day (which were strut-folding). The Colorpack II was one of the first in a long line of cheap consumer Polaroid cameras that featured a ridged plastic body (c. late 1960s - early 1970s). This was done primarily to make the cameras as inexpensive and simple as possible. Also, the new "pull-out-and-peel-apart" pack film eliminated the need for a mechanism to re-cock the shutter after each exposure; keeping the internal mechanics to a bare minimum. Earlier versions of the Colorpack II featured a single element lens made of glass, while lenses in later versions were plastic.
This model was designed to be a farily "bare-bones", easy-to-use, simple point-and-shoot Polaroid camera. Many of the features seen in other (generaly higher-end) Polaroid cameras such as automatic exposure, shutter-timer, rangefinder, etc; were either removed entirely or simplified.
On the top of the front faceplate of the camera there is an ASA setting switch; which allows the user to select 75 (for color) or 3000 ASA (black and white). On the front there is an exposure setting knob, which ranges from "Darken" to "Lighten". On the right side of the faceplate is a socket for standard (blue-dot) "Flashcubes", along with a wind-up hot shoe and a collapsible plastic diffuser. Unlike the most Polaroid 100-400 cameras, the Colorpack II does not feature a rangefinder mechanism. Instead focusing is achieved by adjusting the focus ring on the front element lens (distances from 3.5 to 60+ feet)
An online version of the manual for this and other Polaroid models can be found at: