Instant photo fans worry about post-Polaroid era

Praxius

Mass'Debater
Dec 18, 2007
10,609
99
48
Halifax, NS & Melbourne, VIC


http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20080214/Polaroid_era_080214/20080214?hub=World

BOSTON -- When Jerry Conlogue heard Polaroid will soon stop producing its instant film, he worried about his mummies.

Conlogue uses Polaroid film when he travels deep into the Peruvian jungle to take X-ray photographs of ancient mummies so he doesn't have to lug cumbersome developing chemicals. Now he and other enthusiasts who use the film for art or specialized industrial photography are left wondering where they'll go to stay stocked.

Deeerr.... it's called a Digital Camera... get one.

"We're incredibly despondent," said Conlogue, co-director of the Bioanthropology Research Institute at Quinnipiac University in Hamden, Conn., where researchers frequently visit remote sites to capture X-ray images of mummies.

"I don't really feel that there is going to be a replacement for it, which is a real problem."
Concord, Mass.-based Polaroid Corp. announced last week it plans to close factories in Massachusetts, Mexico and the Netherlands that make film formats for industrial and consumer uses.

Polaroid instant film will be available in stores into next year, the company said.

Meanwhile, Polaroid - which stopped making instant cameras over the last couple of years -- is seeking a partner to acquire licensing rights, in hopes another firm will continue making the instant film and keep limited supplies available.

Polaroid introduced its first instant camera in 1948, just as the baby boom began and parents were looking for new ways to take photos of their kids. Film packs contained the chemicals for developing images inside the camera and photos emerged from the camera in less than a minute.

Now, some camera buffs who still use Polaroids for fun are trying to buy as much as they can.

Joe Howansky, a 23-year-old professional photo technician from New York City who has shown Polaroid shots at art galleries, said he bought $800 worth of Polaroid film at a discount warehouse club after he learned Friday that Polaroid planned to stop producing its film.

"I expected it was inevitable," Howansky said.

"But I went right out to stock up."

Howansky now has enough to snap 800 Polaroid shots. While he also uses digital cameras that can yield an image within a second after snapping a photo, Howansky likes Polaroid film because he finds its nostalgic quirkiness gets his creative juices flowing.

"It has an intangible quality that fits with walking down the street and I see something cool and snap a photo of it," he said.

Although Polaroid instant film may seem an anachronism in an age of digital photography, it's still widely used for industrial applications.

For example, in medicine, dermatologists use Polaroid film printed with grid patterns to help measure shrinkage in scars over time, said Michael Phelan, a sales manager at Calumet Photographic in Cambridge who works with industrial photography customers.

"There is no substitute for it and there is no other product out there that is a viable alternative," said Phelan, who added his store has received several calls in recent days from customers worried about Polaroid film supplies.

In medicine, he said, people resisted going digital in some fields, because it is so much more convenient to just snap a Polaroid. "It's easier than having to worry about files and downloading...Anyone can pick it up and use it and walk away with an image in a minute," he said.

Oh please... I worked professionally with Film and Digital and it's not that big of a deal.

Steve Rosenthal, a retired architectural photographer, used Polaroids throughout his career to take test photos and check on lighting and composition before taking a final shot using standard film. He's also spent four decades as a hobbyist using Polaroids to snap photos of churches across New England.

The 67-year-old has enough film for 60 Polaroid shots, stored in a refrigerator at his home in Manchester-by-the-Sea, Mass.

"I've got a few boxes now and I've got to be pretty careful about how I use it now," said Rosenthal, who plans to order more film soon.

At EP Levine, a photography store in Boston, business from both instant film and regular film has shrunk with the advent of digital photography. But there's still demand for instant film, especially among photography teachers who require large-format film, said Jay Callum, the store's president.

"We will keep the inventory until the bitter end, because there are people who want it," he said.

"But it's hard to imagine the photo business without Polaroid being a part of it."

Yeah well there ya go... going just like the Floppy Disk.

But I seriously do not get these people. Even my old boss bitched and moaned about digital. Sure at the time he was right, because the cameras at the time were still somewhat new, color capturing was still wonky, and the quality of the captures were limited.

Now you no longer have those issues with digitial, the colors are well balaned (If not, they're a sinch to fix) you can capture hundreds of images on one memory card, the digital cameras are more compact and easier to carry then old film / Polaroid, and you simply get bigger and better pictures captured now, then with Polaroid's little square pic with big white borders.

X-Ray film? No Alternative? Get a lense designed for digital capturing. cripes. Don't like having to upload/download images all the time from the camera to the computer.... invent a wireless USB transfer card which directly uploads to your system, which follows along the same principles as wireless internet.

Come on people keep up.
 

Lester

Council Member
Sep 28, 2007
1,062
12
38
63
Ardrossan, Alberta
I find that almost any picture you take with a digital is great im' sure a dentist should be able to put a grid on a digital file- it's almost lester proof it's not that i'm a luddite, just a crappy photographer. I mean really do these guys have walkmans still? maybe eight tracks...


Lester