Taken on an Polaroid 600 with Impossible Project film. I'm new to Polaroid, got 2 cameras for Christmas each supplied with a film, Each pack of film has 8 shots and costs about 20 euro, so waste not, make sure every shot is a sure fire cracker is your mantra. All very well until you consider that the film is temperature sensitive ( 13 and 28° C (55 – 82° F)) and needs to be shielded from light for the first 30 minutes after shooting,add to that the camera itself is quiet clunky in cold hands. After thinking about it I just pressed the shutter, grabbed the picture as soon as it was spat out of the camera , put it in an inside pocket of my jacket and waited. Of the first 8 this one no 3 to my mind is the best, With another 8 frames to spoil I can't wait
Looking forward to seeing more. I had a Polaroid a very long time ago, and I can only remember one picture I took with it (I probably took at least 8). Look forward to your comments about using Polaroid.
I'm made away with this image and it's an easy Fav, but... I would have preferred that you had presented it cropped to the image itself. For me the Polaroid setting detracts rather than adds to the value of the image... almost as if we are expected to say 'Oh, it's a polaroid... better judge it differently then!'
Phew.... that's bloody expensive. It must be kind of exciting though to have the finished product printed and developed withing 10 seconds.
Love this one by the way, easy fav
very cool photo though it may not have been the best experiment in your mind. I agree with Vera @vera365 that they look as though they are on an expedition somewhere new and exciting!
@rachelwithey It is a hoot, , love to see what you get, Thing is you don't know if you have a working camera until you put a film in. The battery is contained in the film pack, not the camera..
Love this one by the way, easy fav
The tones the atmosphere - agree with @jackies365 a futuristic expedition