2011-10-25 // 18:47:34 I see Impossible is offering more refurbished ORIGINAL Polaroid cameras for sale. I have several cameras (mostly 600 models) that are in perfect working condition available for a small cost plus shipping. If anyone is interested email me at buzsawyer53@yahoo.com.
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2011-08-25 // 23:15:41 I'm back and am armed with a new pack of PX600! Which camera to use and what too shoot are the hard choices now.
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2010-09-30 // 22:10:19 I'm with Esmeralda on the New Project!!! I need some new film so let's make it interesting.
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2010-03-09 // 23:32:31 OK, I can do that Easily enough.
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2010-03-08 // 22:44:05 Hey Webbo (or anyone else who know's the answer), how do I post some new camera pictures on the "Tools" page? I've got a lot of historical stuff that I'd like to share.
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2009-09-24 // 23:40:59 I've recently been asked to do two displays, one is of my aviation art at the local aerospace museum; the second is to display my Polaroid Rollfilm Camera and accessories collection at the county library.
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2009-07-30 // 00:35:37 It looks like a blatant rip-off of web imagery. They don't appear to give the artist credit all the time, just the smudge who stole the pic. I see a couple of emilie79's things out there.
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2009-04-30 // 05:26:20 So, this latest project seems to have some people in a quandry! I might ask, where are the trains, or the planes? People were most often the subjects of the early cameras, but really, almost any subject was fair game. Polaroid, as a corporation, was started in 1937. The design for the first instant camera was completed in 1947, but the first actual sales to the public weren't until November 26, 1948. All of the pictures were (initially) sepia, then just black-and-white until the first polacolor film in 1963. Polaroid pictures from those earliest days, at least the ones that have survived; are simply amazing. I think this is a great opprtunity for some serious retrospective... Good Luck!
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2009-02-28 // 20:28:45 To quote my friend Carmendevos... "WOW!" Thanks so much fot the SotD today. I took two shots of the valley storm, about 3 minutes apart. This one was the better of the two. These are the things that you can never plan for. Ansel Adams described the story behind his famous shot of the "Moonrise over Hernandez" and how he was just driving along and looked out the window osf his car and saw the Moon rising. He says he immediatley pulled over to the side of the road and climbed up on top of his car with his camera and took the shot. I'm not trying to compare myself to Ansel Adams, but I think we all have these moments and to often we just don't have a camera, etc. Thanks again and I wish us all the best of luck!
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