lubitel
Well-known
has anyone used this? what exactly is it? is there a special slide film you have to shoot?
Pablito
coco frío
yes, a special polaroid film. I doubt you could get it any more. After shooting, you put it thru a little processor that polaroid sold - all done in daylight. Of course you had to mount the slides. From what I recall, there was b&w as well as color slide film.
EcoLeica
Check out my blog!!!
from what it shown in 'instant film photography', Polaroid made three 35mm instant slides
1) Polapan CT - B&W rated at ISO 125
2) Polachrome CS - Colour slide rated at ISO 40 (additive colour slide film
3) Polagraph HC - B&W with a very high contrast similar to Lith film. Rated ISO 400
All instant slides where developed using the Autoprocessor which was a mini hand cranked developer to which you poured the chemicals into. Instant slides took around 5min to process
Much like Polavision im not sure if it was a great hit....im not sure if you can still get it...i doubt it though
1) Polapan CT - B&W rated at ISO 125
2) Polachrome CS - Colour slide rated at ISO 40 (additive colour slide film
3) Polagraph HC - B&W with a very high contrast similar to Lith film. Rated ISO 400
All instant slides where developed using the Autoprocessor which was a mini hand cranked developer to which you poured the chemicals into. Instant slides took around 5min to process
Much like Polavision im not sure if it was a great hit....im not sure if you can still get it...i doubt it though
robert blu
quiet photographer
the Polapan B&W was a special film, with an "typical" special grain. Unfortunately it is no more in production. Together with the Agfa Scala is a big loss for my taste...
rob
rob
Trius
Waiting on Maitani
I used the Polapan and loved it. It was not cheap. There were two processors, IIRC; the manual with hand crank, and a motorized version.
agfa100
Well-known
I also used the b&w and scala both are sadly missed....
wbill
wbill
Phil Ashbrook
Newbie
Polaroid 35mm slide trannys
Polaroid 35mm slide trannys
I was very lucky to have a family member working for the company here in Australia , I used the whole range with the electric and manual processer , it's fast to do but great care must be taken not to scratch the film , it's very delicate , the 40ASA stock has great colour , it loves blue , great for the beach , the high contrast B/W is very hard to work with , it's allmost litho , so a spot meter is needed , very easy to overexpose the skin in the face , Polaroid are back but they will never bring this stuff back , I dont know of any product by any other makers that is slow high contrast in that way .
Polaroid 35mm slide trannys
I was very lucky to have a family member working for the company here in Australia , I used the whole range with the electric and manual processer , it's fast to do but great care must be taken not to scratch the film , it's very delicate , the 40ASA stock has great colour , it loves blue , great for the beach , the high contrast B/W is very hard to work with , it's allmost litho , so a spot meter is needed , very easy to overexpose the skin in the face , Polaroid are back but they will never bring this stuff back , I dont know of any product by any other makers that is slow high contrast in that way .
Pickett Wilson
Veteran
I tried it back in the day, but the color was strange.
David Murphy
Veteran
I've seen Polaroid instant slide film and processing contraptions sell for good money on eBay. I guess it has a cult following of some sort. As I understand it doing E6 at home is easier than it was in the past, so that's probably a more practical route.
Dwig
Well-known
I tried it back in the day, but the color was strange.
I played with it when it came out. The color was indeed "strange" in comparison to modern color films. It bore some similarity to the antique Autochromes, though it had a linear rather than random filter pattern more like that of the process developed by Robert Krayn.
The film had a series of linear filters for each of the three RGB colors in front of a B&W light sensitive emulsion. Processing left the filters in place. The slides were darker looking when projected, as if the projector had a dimmer lamp or slower lens. Printing times were 1-2 stops longer than with conventional films.
FPjohn
Well-known
These films are no longer available. In the day, they were a boon for technical slide presentations. The BW material was "special".
yours
FPJ
yours
FPJ
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Benjamin
Registered Snoozer
I was very lucky to have a family member working for the company here in Australia , I used the whole range with the electric and manual processer , it's fast to do but great care must be taken not to scratch the film , it's very delicate , the 40ASA stock has great colour , it loves blue , great for the beach , the high contrast B/W is very hard to work with , it's allmost litho , so a spot meter is needed , very easy to overexpose the skin in the face , Polaroid are back but they will never bring this stuff back , I dont know of any product by any other makers that is slow high contrast in that way .
Awful font.
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