Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Requiem for Polaroid ?

Sharon, 1993 from Dreamers

I have been thinking about Polaroid film lately, since the company's announcement that they were discontinuing production. Like most photographers of my generation, I used Polaroid cameras-initially the cheap, plastic versions my parents provided and later beautifully crafted folding models with Zeiss lenses, like the one I used in 1993 for a project called Dreamers. My film of choice was Polaroid Positive/Negative, which produced not only a black and white print (positive) but a large negative that could be cleared and dried and used in a darkroom to make enlargements. I also used Polaroid BW film to test lighting set-ups in my studio.

Polaroid film was important because it cut out the middleman; the photographer took a picture and within a few minutes, held the print in his hands. No drugstore or minilab to finish the job and often finish it badly. (Almost) instant gratification, way back in the 50's, and a unique one-of-a kind photograph, ready for a family album. I sincerely hope that some other company decides to license the Polaroid technology- there are a lot of photographers who are passionate about the product, but are there enough?

Check out this site, devoted to saving Polaroid film.

Ansel Adams was directly involved in the development of Polaroid film, used it extensively and wrote the definitive book on its creative use.

Dr. Edwin Land, Polaroid's inventor, profiled here.

Use any technology, old or new, simple or sophisticated, but

Keep Shootin'.
Kenny

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