Want more "control" with Polaroid cameras!

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jasonjoo

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I am having a BLAST with my newly acquired Polaroid Model 440 land camera. However, I am now wanting "more." More control. Are there any polaroid cameras that offer more control in terms of setting a shutter speed, aperture, etc?

Thanks in advance,

Jason
 

DBP

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Yes, but they are expensive. Specifically, there are the 180, 185, 190, and 195. See Dead Link Removed.
 

sfadam

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as an aside, you can use any 35mm camera of your choice and shoot slides, and then print them using any one of the polaroid slide printers (daylab, vivitar slide printer, polaprinter,etc.) i make prints all the time, even not for the sake of image manipulations
 
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jasonjoo

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Yikes, they are expensive! I'll have to stick with my model 440 :smile:

sfadam, thanks for the suggestion. I had no idea that you could do that!
 

Akki14

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Daylabs are quite pricey too. I loved the polaroid transfers a university student showed us back in high school but they had a daylab and i never worked out the specifics of it until now and now that I have a type-100 film camera, I hope to get around to trying it out sometime soon.

You could have fun tricking the sensor with various neutral density filters either over the sensor only or over the sensor and the lens. I was trying that with my husband's Instax camera and with my sx-70 when I have 600type film in it.
 
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jasonjoo

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Thanks for the suggestions!

Roger, I thought about using a MF body and a polaroid adaptor, but I'd really like to make use of the entire image area of a polaroid. Almost all the samples I've seen only use a portion of the polaroid negative.

LF is just too big for my tastes (for now :smile: ).
 

sfadam

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yeah, daylabs can be expensive. but they give you a lot of control over the print.
polaprinters usually go for $30-50 and vivitar slide printers from $40-70. which is a little odd, because the polaprinter has adjustments for contrast and exposure, while the vivitar printer only has exposure control. both have slide holders that allow you to insert filters for color balancing.
 

Roger Hicks

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Thanks for the suggestions!

Roger, I thought about using a MF body and a polaroid adaptor, but I'd really like to make use of the entire image area of a polaroid. Almost all the samples I've seen only use a portion of the polaroid negative.

LF is just too big for my tastes (for now :smile: ).
That's the good bit about a quarter-plate camera -- Polaroid IS quarter-plate. Or you could look for an old 9x12cm camera designed for single metal dark-slides, either baseboard or doppel-klapp. These are usually much smaller than 4x5 inch.

It's also possible to to make a body to go on the front of an adapter and stick a front-cell-focusing lens on there. All you need is a simple pyramid. I actually made one out of cardboard, but thin sheet alloy or plywood would be better. Then stick a front-cell-focusing lens (in a shutter) from an old RF folder on it: surprisingly many 105s will cover quarter-plate Polaroid. All you need then is a wire-frame viewfinder.

Cheers,

Roger
 

Steve Smith

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Or you could get a cheap pack film camera, remove the front and add a lens from something else. Like this:

dscf0293_7577.jpg



Steve.
 
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jasonjoo

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Wow, I must say, a lot of this went over my head! I'm not very tech saavy :smile:

Steve, that is pretty cool! I'm guessing you can only set the aperture through the lens, but the camera will still dictate the shutter speeds based on that aperture?
 

Roger Hicks

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Wow, I must say, a lot of this went over my head! I'm not very tech saavy :smile:

Steve, that is pretty cool! I'm guessing you can only set the aperture through the lens, but the camera will still dictate the shutter speeds based on that aperture?

Nope. You set both aperture and speed on the lens.

Steve's idea is MUCH better than mine.

Cheers,

Roger
 

lens_hacker

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Several years ago, a company converted automatic Polaroids to manual control by replacing the electric eye with a variable resistor. They "calibrated" it to shutter speed. Basically, the CDS cell is just a variable resistor. So the idea was to put a manual one in its place.

Anybody want to try it?
 

3Dfan

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as an aside, you can use any 35mm camera of your choice and shoot slides, and then print them using any one of the polaroid slide printers (daylab, vivitar slide printer, polaprinter,etc.) i make prints all the time, even not for the sake of image manipulations
How are the lenses on them? Will they make good sharp prints?
 
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