I’m an ardent Polaroid fan. The SX-70 featured here was the first purchase I ever made on eBay. It arrived in pristine condition and smelling of cigars — not unpleasant, just … distinct. :) The scent has subsided over the years; but every time I open the case I get a faint whiff and smile, imagining the first owner. I’d never handled an SX-70 before and was unsure how to open it from a closed position, so I took it to a local camera shop for help. Barely in the door, I was mobbed by employees who oohed, aahed, and then shoved each other out of the way to show me how to operate it. That was the first time I observed Polaroid rapture up close, and it was far from the last. Back then Time-Zero film was still available — expensive, but I didn’t care. The entire experience was magic and the cost of film just made each shot all the more precious.
When anyone asks what initially got me excited about photography, why I began to pursue it seriously, I describe the winter day I took my SX-70 to the Northwest Railway Museum in Snoqualmie and snapped pix of the trains. I learned that when Time-Zero film gets cold, it develops with a predominantly blue cast. My close-ups of train parts appeared cool, moody, and I was completely enchanted.
In 2005 production of Time-Zero film ceased. Turned out I’d gotten to the party at the 11th hour. But then late in 2008 several former employees of Polaroid’s Holland film plant (the last manufacturing center for the ‘integral’ SX-70, 600, and Spectra films) and Austrian entrepreneur Florian Kaps undertook The Impossible Project. They were able to lease the film plant and rescue the 9 integral film assembly machines before they were demolished and hauled off for scrap. Visit the site to read their story and see the amazing fruits of their labor.
Years ago architectural photographers used instant cameras to scout locations in preparation for photo shoots, documenting the look of interiors and exteriors in relation to various times of day, the light — where it’s brightest, where the shadows fall — and of course to develop compelling composition. In the wonderful documentary Visual Acoustics: The Modernism of Julius Shulman (2008), Shulman — arguably, the most famous architectural photographer of the 20th century — made great use of his Polaroid camera (in conjunction with state of the art digital equipment) right up to the time of his retirement and death last year.
I’m a planner — Marilyn will vouch for this :) — and love the scouting aspect of shooting architecture. For fun I decided to give it a go “old school” with my SX-70 at Seattle City Hall. The shots in my photo were taken with experimental Artistic Z film created by The Impossible Project for use with the SX-70. It develops with yellow/green overtones, often with spots and blemishes, and it will probably fade over time. And, you guessed it, the cost has increased. But the experience of pressing the red button, hearing the noisy whir as the picture exits the camera, and watching it process remains a thrill. :)
Recommendation: The Polaroid Book (Selections from the Polaroid Collections of Photography). Edwin Land was brilliant, his long standing relationship with Ansel Adams integral to the growth of the instant camera, and images included in Taschen’s text are nothing short of inspirational. Recent news: Sotheby’s sale in June of 1,200 photographs from the collection.
Image available with a RF license: Old Style Scouting


























