Ces1um
Member
So I saw a polaroid sx-70 one step rainbow type camera at a yard sale the other day for $4 and said what the hell, and bought it. Picked up a flash unit for it (the corresponding "Q" flash that was built for this camera) for another $10 and a pack of impossible colour film. Looking at impossible's website, their film is 160 iso and not 70 iso as the cameras light meter is calibrated for. It's suggested to turn the lighten/darken wheel one third into the darken area to compensate. Then I start shooting and all hell breaks loose. Things seem mostly underexposed.
So, first of all, does anybody know if the "exposure wheel" on the front of the camera, which is divided into 6 segments (three lighten, three darken) correspond to actual stops? like does one segment equal one stop or is it simply some random amount unique to polaroid? I shot a photo of my daughter with her back to the sun and lightened it by three "segments" to help keep her from silhouetting out. Definitely didn't get the result I thought I would. Given they recommend moving the lighten darken wheel 1/3 into the dark section to compensate for the doubling of the film sensitivity stated in my first paragraph, it would suggest that each individual segment on that exposure comp wheel would be one stop. Opening up three stops should have provided a better exposure of my daughters face than the near silhouette I did get.
Also, I'm finding the flash difficult to judge. Full disclosure- I'm not really well versed in the use of a flash. All my photography to date is pretty much natural light. That being said, impossible recommends the use of a flash with their sx70 film and instax won't even let you disable it on the majority of their cameras. So off I go, flash in hand. I'm outdoors on a bright day and take a photo of my kids. About 5 feet from them, everything set to "middle position" on the flash and camera for those lighten/darken options. My kids came out well exposed but the background at 4pm looked like it was 9 o'clock at night. The sky was dark (very strange), the foliage immediately behind them (maybe 5-6 feet from the camera and within the flashes stated range) was underexposed and very dark. Again, looking like it was late at night. My subjects were front lit by the sun.
So does anybody know the stop difference per segment of the cameras in body lighten/darken/exposure compensation wheel? Does anybody know the stop difference between the neutral, lighten and darken slider on Polaroid's "Q" flash?
Any tips for using the camera in general? I know impossible's film is still fairly experimental but I'd like to make sure the fault isn't with me before I start faulting the film for every missed shot.
So, first of all, does anybody know if the "exposure wheel" on the front of the camera, which is divided into 6 segments (three lighten, three darken) correspond to actual stops? like does one segment equal one stop or is it simply some random amount unique to polaroid? I shot a photo of my daughter with her back to the sun and lightened it by three "segments" to help keep her from silhouetting out. Definitely didn't get the result I thought I would. Given they recommend moving the lighten darken wheel 1/3 into the dark section to compensate for the doubling of the film sensitivity stated in my first paragraph, it would suggest that each individual segment on that exposure comp wheel would be one stop. Opening up three stops should have provided a better exposure of my daughters face than the near silhouette I did get.
Also, I'm finding the flash difficult to judge. Full disclosure- I'm not really well versed in the use of a flash. All my photography to date is pretty much natural light. That being said, impossible recommends the use of a flash with their sx70 film and instax won't even let you disable it on the majority of their cameras. So off I go, flash in hand. I'm outdoors on a bright day and take a photo of my kids. About 5 feet from them, everything set to "middle position" on the flash and camera for those lighten/darken options. My kids came out well exposed but the background at 4pm looked like it was 9 o'clock at night. The sky was dark (very strange), the foliage immediately behind them (maybe 5-6 feet from the camera and within the flashes stated range) was underexposed and very dark. Again, looking like it was late at night. My subjects were front lit by the sun.
So does anybody know the stop difference per segment of the cameras in body lighten/darken/exposure compensation wheel? Does anybody know the stop difference between the neutral, lighten and darken slider on Polaroid's "Q" flash?
Any tips for using the camera in general? I know impossible's film is still fairly experimental but I'd like to make sure the fault isn't with me before I start faulting the film for every missed shot.