R
Rob
Guest
I have been playing around with the old Polaroid rangefinder
cameras like the model 250 I had, and 101 which I have now.
They fold out with a bellows and have auto exposure.
I find these dirt cheap locally. The 101 cost $8 with instructions
and hard carrying case. Usually the batteries have died but both
of mine had good batteries. They take a weird one
you can still get, or you can convert them to a modern battery.
I have tried color film in it and the colors are pretty muted and I dont care for it.
I tried some of the Negative/positive B&W film and it is pretty
neat. It gives you a print(not the best resolution) and a
huge high resolution negative at the same time.
Just wash the goop off the negative and soak it in some chemical
to harden it and its done.
Amazing that this technology is about 40 years old!
Anyone else using these cameras?
Rob
cameras like the model 250 I had, and 101 which I have now.
They fold out with a bellows and have auto exposure.
I find these dirt cheap locally. The 101 cost $8 with instructions
and hard carrying case. Usually the batteries have died but both
of mine had good batteries. They take a weird one
you can still get, or you can convert them to a modern battery.
I have tried color film in it and the colors are pretty muted and I dont care for it.
I tried some of the Negative/positive B&W film and it is pretty
neat. It gives you a print(not the best resolution) and a
huge high resolution negative at the same time.
Just wash the goop off the negative and soak it in some chemical
to harden it and its done.
Amazing that this technology is about 40 years old!
Anyone else using these cameras?
Rob