Ezzie
E. D. Russell Roberts
FP3000B emulsion is coated onto paper, not polyester nor celluloid nitrate or acetate. The negative can only ever be used for scanning, trying to retrieve a transparent negative for regular enlargement is a no-go, no point in trying. Unless you are very good at lifting the emulsion and applying it to transparent plastic (in one piece). In which case you could probably patent the process 
JChrome
Street Worker
looks like solarization is taking hold
Thanks for that and for Ezzie's comments.
Do you have suggestions for combatting this? I could imagine you could peel open the negative in a dark bag but I don't think I'd want to do this. What about leaving the negative/positive together and unpeeled for 5 minutes and then taking them a part?
Ezzie
E. D. Russell Roberts
The latter helps, but is still not enough. You also risk that some of the glossy coating dries to the negative, ruining the finish of the print. I try to remember to bring along a box in which the negs and prints can dry. But also a pair of scissors and a small bag to collect rubbish from cutting off both ends of the negative. There are a few DIY examples to be found on the web, I need to re-engineer mine. Something like this maybe?
http://www.getaddictedto.com/fujifilm-and-polaroid-drying-storage-box/
http://www.getaddictedto.com/fujifilm-and-polaroid-drying-storage-box/
charjohncarter
Veteran
Has anyone tried Type 667 negatives?
ABrosig
Well-known

Polaroid100_LogginsNEG by Andrew Brosig, on Flickr
Scanned paper negative (I know, I treated it really rough. But I kinda like the beat up look and the solarization).

Polaroid100_LogginsPOS by Andrew Brosig, on Flickr
And, the positive - FP3000B in Polaroid Land Automatic 100. Bought the camera years ago on a lark as part of a pretty extensive kit, with portrait set, cloud filter, timers, cable release, etc, all in amazing condition. It's been sitting on a shelf until recently when I bodged it to take AAA batteries. Got a cheap flashlite at Office Depot, 3 pack for $11, which had a round AAA holder which fits the battery compartment of the camera perfectly. Haven't tried any of the filters yet. Waiting for a good day. Been gray and crappy here in East Texas.
charjohncarter
Veteran
Polaroid100_LogginsNEG by Andrew Brosig, on Flickr
Scanned paper negative (I know, I treated it really rough. But I kinda like the beat up look and the solarization).
Polaroid100_LogginsPOS by Andrew Brosig, on Flickr
And, the positive - FP3000B in Polaroid Land Automatic 100. Bought the camera years ago on a lark as part of a pretty extensive kit, with portrait set, cloud filter, timers, cable release, etc, all in amazing condition. It's been sitting on a shelf until recently when I bodged it to take AAA batteries. Got a cheap flashlight at Office Depot, 3 pack for $11, which had a round AAA holder which fits the battery compartment of the camera perfectly. Haven't tried any of the filters yet. Waiting for a good day. Been gray and crappy here in East Texas.
I have the same camera and I did the same with the AAA batteries, not the flashlight but a Radio Shack AAA holder. But to the point of my post, I think if you have Goggles attachment for the portrait lens you will really like it. Sorry, off subject of the OP.

Untitled by John Carter, on Flickr
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