View allAll Photos Tagged polaroidlandcamera
(Saturday, 22 January 2011) After countless times driving by this tree and thinking "I'd like a picture of that", I finally stopped today.
Camera: Polaroid SX-70 Land Camera
Film: Polaroid Artistic Time Zero from The Impossible Project
I don't think there is anything better to do in a small town than to go creeping around the huge machinery that occasionally roll into town!
I bet they thought they were being helpful, but we thought it was lazy, rude, and littering that they had not taken their brand new (with tag still attached) lawn chair with them when they left the river.
Polaroid Sonar Autofocus 5000, Close Up +3, Impossible Project PX100 Silver Shade Pioneer test film.
Polaroid Land Camera mishap with Fuji FP-100C instant film, double exposure, cropped. Both images are from Cadillac Mountain in Acadia National Park, Maine.
#FlickrMeetup #SF
Impossible Film
Instant Camera walk
Flickrmeetup teamed up with Photobooth SF for a fun photo walk using impossible film and polaroid cameras. My 'pulling' technique needs a lot of work. I need more muscle it seems for a smooth photo.But I am happy for a 'first time'. Great experience and loved having a photo to hold almost immediately.
Polaroid SX-70 with SX-70 Blend film
pattycakemelting joined us for a little roidweeking.
White with rainbow stripe, red shutter button. uses SX-70 film. currently loaded with Impossible Silver Shade film. purchased in 2002, charity shop, $5.
Camera+, Tilt Shift Gen, iPhone 4.
Emma in the rose garden - Balboa Park. Shot with my new toy; a Polaroid Land Camera 104 - very excited! Shot with FUJIFILM FP-100C 2009.
Sorted the cams. Things the iPhone replaced
GENERAL
Depth 1.9 in
Sensor Resolution 2.0 Megapixel
Optical Sensor Type CCD
Total Pixels 2140000 pixels
Effective Sensor Resolution 2000000 pixels
Optical Sensor Size 1/3.2"
Digital Zoom 2 x
System TTL contrast detection
Digital Video Format AVI
Image Recording Format JPEG
ManufacturerCasio Inc.
CAMERA FLASH
Type built-in flash
Effective Flash Range 2 ft - 6.6 ft
The (expired) blue Polaroid film is so juicy and gooey that it invariably leaves a big crust on the spreader bar the next day, if you don't finish the pack up all in one day.
Shot #10 jammed, and with a little monkey business, coaxing, slight of hand and a shady room, I was able to salvage an image on the film.
Turns out my co-worker Carie has a OneStep Polaroid, just like mine, except hers came with a fancy carrying case and the original manual.
Dinner time entertainment: from the motel deck we spotted a person wandering the top of a distant butte, about a mile a way. Chad said the area was site of an ancient ruin and therefore fenced off to foot traffic. We watched the person (who because of his/her seemingly impossibly tall stature we called alternately "sasquatch", "big foot" and "the lunatic") with binoculars and my father-in-law tried to signal them with flashing lights. It was pretty amusing. Eventually the person walked away, back down the hill.
Lost to pink
.
Through the eyes of a #PolaroidLandCamera
Fed with expired #FujiFp100c
Spring 2020 #Uticany
Ruth Ellen Sunday morning on the sun porch of the Globe house, with 3 dogs and Tim's legs propped up on her. I like the weird thing going on in the window- that darkened blue green. Not sure what caused it.
The abandoned Delaware & Hudson freight depot in Windsor, New York.
Thinking the first shot wouldn't develop properly, I took a second. Both came out, so I dry peeled the first and wet peeled the second. Of course I didn't have a brush handy before I started, so I ended working this one by hand onto a piece of paper.
First test shot--- both camera and film.
The back-story on this doll can be seen here:
www.flickr.com/photos/a_perhaps_hand/sets/721576296781352...
Polaroid SX-70 Sonar OneStep Land Camera
The Impossible Project PX70 Color Protection film
so i developed film at home for the first time today. i anticipated having a wonderful blog post all formulated today too, but i didn't factor in my incompetence with scanning.
i don't have a negative scanner. i just have an all-in-one printer/scanner/copier dealio that i'm long-term borrowing from evin. i spent quite a bit of time trying to tweak resolution and things on the scanner so i could get a good image, but the pixels kept defeating me!
now that i've got the pixels under control (mostly), i've got to tweak my backlight (iPod) and then...then i'll be good.
and then i can scan all the negatives, and crop them and fix them up all pretty so i can share them in a nice, neat blog post.
then, i'll buy a real negative scanner.
sometime.
:)
*oh, and this photo. there are water spots. oops! also, the camera...i didn't buy it, because i googled it in the thrift store and it turns out this thing takes polaroid roll film, which was discontinued in 1970. thank goodness for smart phones, otherwise i would have been out $10 on a camera i couldn't use!
*UPDATE 2-27-12: photo scanned with proper scanner and replaced
I took some lessons on how to develop film. It was great! Met some cool people.
All day long we were in the darkroom. When the day was over I stepped outside and I shot this. It was cold so the film didn't develop until the heat was on in my car. The heat came pretty fast and I guess that's why the photo looks messed up - but i like it!
Supercolor 1000 Polaroid Land Camera
Impossible PX 70 film
Nov. 18, 2012
Polaroid Super Shooter Plus, Fuji FP100c film.
This was my first test shot I made with my Polaroid Super Shooter Plus camera. I forgot to change the film speed from 3000 to 75 for color film, so I ended up with a blank shot when I peeled the print. I folded over the negative side on to the print and for some reason opened it up to have one last look before throwing away and this is what the result was. Pretty interesting.