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Oh, they got Illford to back it.
I kept thinking, "How could they buy all that equipment so fast?"
LD
I kept thinking, "How could they buy all that equipment so fast?"
LD
MrBern said:http://www.the-impossible-project.com/
Polaroid workers buy old equipment & are looking for a way to keep the tradition going.
Analog workers shaking their fist at the digital future!
SavePolaroid.com Co-Founder Creates Two Companies, Will Develop New Polaroid-Compatible Film
Posted: March 30th, 2009 01:01 PM EDT
source: PMA Newsline
Dave Bias, co-founder of SavePolaroid.com, announces the formation of two new Polaroid Corp.-related companies -- PolaPremium and The Impossible Project. Bias partnered with Dr. Florian Kaps, the proprietor of unsaleable.com, which has been selling Polaroid film and cameras for the past three years out of Vienna, Austria.
The first new company, PolaPremium, is a partnership with Polaroid to celebrate Polaroid's history and to provide the public with the last quantities of Polaroid-manufactured film, cameras and other related items. Throughout 2009, the company will be releasing unique, limited edition and scavenged films, refurbished and new cameras, and other related items, says Bias.
The second company, The Impossible Project, will begin manufacturing new Polaroid-compatible film beginning in 2010. Kaps purchased the last Polaroid factory in Enschede, Holland, retaining the top eleven workers from the factory, and is currently experimenting with new techniques and sourcing materials needed to make film types compatible with Polaroid 600, SX-70 and Spectra cameras, says Bias.
Kaps and Bias have formed a new company here in the United States, and are officially beginning operations as the North American partner and distributor for PolaPremium. The new Impossible film may be distributed in the U.S. when it's available.
Polaroid Lovers Try to Revive Its Instant Film
They want to recast an outdated production process in an abandoned Polaroid factory for an age that has fallen for digital pictures because they think people still have room in their hearts for retro photography that eschews airbrushing or Photoshop.
Doctor Strange said:Ah, the old b/w Polaroid process with the smelly fixative...
Nighthawk said:Serious photographers know that even an advanced DSLR camera can't compete with film.
Nighthawk said:Polaroid cameras, maybe. But not standard film cameras. Serious photographers know that even an advanced DSLR camera can't compete with film. Part of the editing process (i.e. some of the things one can do in Photoshop) actually takes place in the darkroom. Besides, working long hours in the darkroom is fun!
NH
Matt Crunk said:As someone who has watched with great interest as the professional world transitioned from film to ever advancing digital technology, I have to disagree. Except for nostalgic purposes, film (both static and motion picture) is obsolete. At this point there is nothing that film can produce that cannot be duplicated with high-end digital technology and photoshop, not to mention being cheaper and more controllable (I don't recall any darkroom process that has an "undo" button).
That said, I still hate to see Polaroid film go.
LizzieMaine said:Technologically, you may be right, but as someone involved in motion picture exhibition, I can tell you we're still a long way from film-quality digital projection being fully practical -- practical in the sense that any neighborhood theatre can afford it. It'll be a long time before anything that can equal proper projection of 35mm film will be both available and affordable in the average market, especially since the studios and the MPAA have shown no interest in underwriting the cost of conversion. Film will still be with us for the foreseeable future.