Polaroid 664 Method

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dustym

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Joined
Oct 16, 2005
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165
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Essex, just
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I have shot some of the 664 with pretty nasty results, The scene I have shot before and been happy with, is it pretty hit and miss or should I be getting good results with this film ,or could it be just a bad batch.

The image seems to be smudgy for want of a better term and very contrasty
although metering for shadow detail and no real highlights to blow out,
Imusing my RB 67 with a 90 mm lens.

No spots etc on the film an Im removing from the cameraback as suggested.

Any guidance would be great

Dusty
 

Donald Qualls

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Jan 19, 2005
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Are you watching the time carefully before peeling? You can get considerable change in contrast and print density by over- or underdeveloping with Polaroid B&W materials; the stuff I'm most familiar with, 667, gets darker and more contrasty if I let it go longer, while it'll be light and "muddy" (and also prone to peel marks) if I peel it early. Temperature gets into this, too -- if it wasn't in the packaging, there's information in the data sheets (downloadable from Polaroid's web site) on how to compensate development time for temperature.

Bottom line, if you're doing everything the same way, you should get prints about as consistent as what you could produce in a darkroom with an enlarger. If you're not getting that consistency, especially within the same pack of film, you're introducing variations. "Bad batches" of Polaroid films usually come out with streaks or blotches, and stay light (or, with color, have color shifts) due to aging of the processing gel; I've got some Type 52 that expired almost 20 years ago that required 8x the normal process time to give even light, low-contrast prints (fortunately, it was almost free; the 52 I got with it was worth the shipping I paid even if I have to peel the packets in the darkroom and process the negatives in trays).
 
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