View allAll Photos Tagged polaroidlandcamera

with black case and silver crocodile leather imitation

Villa Riviera, downtown Long Beach, Ca. Taken from my car window.

 

Brian's Film Photography Podcast Guest Blog:

michaelraso.blogspot.com/2010/12/polaroid-210-land-camera...

 

Image © Brian Moore

 

Brian's Flickr Photostream

www.flickr.com/photos/56486443@N08/page2/

Not the most attractive camera ever made, and an ergonomic nightmare. However, it works, and only cost £3.50 from a charity shop.

 

Quick, first impressions, blog post.

 

(Saturday, 4 December 2010) Helped out with a youth retreat this weekend here at camp. Introduced them to the joys of lighting the Menorah (and Polaroid photography!)

#Utica paints too

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Through the eyes of a #PolaroidLandCamera

Fed with expired #FujiFp100c

Spring 2020 #UticaNY

Camera: Polaroid Land Camera 101 + stacked macro magnifying lenses

 

Description: It’s a long process but once done I like the photograph I got. Setting everything up from the little pill to the HO scale figure found in a hobby train store it has been a fun experiment.

 

With the bottom photo I wanted to show that it is indeed an instant film photograph.

 

www.decaystudio.com

polaroid 2- day FOUR

 

{polaroid sx-70 + expired polaroid 600 film with ND filter}

Polaroid SX-70 Land Camera Model 1 + 600 Film + ND Filter

 

Pola No 123.

  

The season's first sighting of the elusive Chihuahuabunny in his native habitat. Some folks believe this creature to be mythical, much like the jackalope or the chupacabra. However, this photo evidence proves otherwise.

We had time to kill before eating (again) and then driving on to the ship bound for Melbourne. Another beautiful day in Tasmania.

The old Boston Edison power station on Summer St. in South Boston. August 24, '12 Taken with my Polaroid 100 Land Camera using Fujifilm FP-100c. One hash mark towards Darken.

The car performed flawlessly. A round trip of around 2500km averaging around 10 litres of fuel per 100km.

Standpipe on Mass Ave by Orange Line. 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.

hells kitchen flea market, NYC

Me: So I *think*...I would *imagine* this is probably a shot of us the day I came home.

 

Mom: Yes, yes. They were waiting patiently for you. And they were pacing up and down when we arrived. It was a quite a big day to meet their little brother.

Ocean Center Building, downtown Long Beach, Ca. Taken from my car window.

 

Brian's Film Photography Podcast Guest Blog:

michaelraso.blogspot.com/2010/12/polaroid-210-land-camera...

 

Image © Brian Moore

 

Brian's Flickr Photostream

www.flickr.com/photos/56486443@N08/page2/

Zuiganzan Enkouji Temple

 

[My] photos are often out of focus, rough, streaky, warped, etc. But if you think about it, a normal human being will in one day perceive an infinite number of images, and some of them are focused upon, others are barely seen out of the corner of one's eye.

Daido Moriyama

 

Converted Polaroid 110a

 

Ilford FP4 plus

ASA80

© www.markdanielphoto.com

 

The Recipe

5 mins pre soak

8.30 mins Ilford ID11

5 mins Ilford Fixer

10 mins wash

wash aid

Simon. He won't always be this small.

Polaroid 103

Polaroid 125i

// FACEBOOK // WEBSITE // BLOG // INSTAGRAM //

 

A series of photographs from the islands of Hawaii.

 

South Point Beach, Big Island

Mom: That's Tommy eating a hairbrush in the den...or the family room.

 

Me: Did he always put a lot things in his mouth?

 

Mom: Yeah.

Ah well, this would have been a celebratory picture of the resurrection of the twinkle, but my Polaroid doesn't handle anything but super bright light.

Testing out the Polaroid LMS 600, which I found in a yard sale for a couple bucks. Very unhappy with the results. Compared to the Sun 660, it's a really unpleasant camera.

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Space Murals Museum, somewhere near Las Cruces, New Mexico.

Can't get enough of that Polaroid Swinger....

 

Vintage cameras on display at a photo place in Cumberland.

Polaroid 215 Land Camera, Polaroid type 100 Blue film.

 

www.nickleonardphoto.com

Los elementos típicos de las cámaras de caja simple se combinaron en el Polaroid Swinger Model 20: una lente de menisco de foco fijo (Polaroid f17 100mm), una sencilla obturación rotativa de una velocidad (1/200 seg.). El primer tipo de película en rollo para exposiciones que tenían que ser sacadas de la cámara para ser desarrolladas a la luz. Las películas Polaroid fueron muy rápidas (ISO 640). La cámara se llamó el modelo 20 porque el objetivo original era crear una cámara que cuesta alrededor de $ 20 USdls.

 

Otras características eran un visor telescópico, un zócalo para bombilla de flash AG-1 con reflector oculto detrás de la ventana del medidor, y una rueda roja del control de la apertura alrededor del botón disparador, combinado con una escala de alcance del flash. Esta provista de un medidor de condiciones de luz con un indicador “YES” que aparecía en la ventana debajo del ocular, cuando la luz y la abertura eran suficientes.

 

Fue uno de los primeros modelos de cámaras instantáneas muy baratos de Polaroid, fabricados entre 1965 y 1970 en Estados Unidos y en Inglaterra. Su versión más temprana fue hecha en los EEUU, cuenta con una señal de "NO" para las situaciones insuficientes de luz.

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Typical elements of simple box cameras were combined in the Polaroid Swinger Model 20: a non-focusable meniscus lens (Polaroid f17 100mm), a simple rotary single-speed shutter (1/200 sec.), and last not least roll film as media, the first type of roll film for exposures which had to be pulled out of the camera to be developed in the light. The Polaroid films were very fast (ISO 640). The camera was called the model 20 because the original goal was to create a camera that cost around $20.

 

Other features were a telescopic viewfinder, an AG-1 flash-bulb socket with reflector hidden behind the meter window, and a red aperture control thumb wheel around the long shutter release button, combined with a flash range scale. A simple meter controlled feature was the sign "YES" that appeared in the window under the finder ocular when light and aperture were sufficient.

 

It was an early one of the very cheap instant camera models of Polaroid, made from 1965 to 1970 in the USA and in England. Its earliest version was made in the US, with additional "NO" sign for insufficient light situations.

 

FP-100C photo taken at Longwood Gardens.

San Gabriel River at S. El Monte, CA

 

Polaroid 220

Polaroid 669 expired 1999

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