Another experiment with Polaroid transfers.
This was a beach in South Carolina, shot at sunset. I converted the image to a slide transparency, exposed it onto a 4x5 Polaroid, then boiled the Polaroid to remove the emulsion layer. With the emulsion floating in hot water, I slid it onto a piece of watercolor paper and molded the wet image around to make it all liquidy and abstract. Fun stuff!
This was a beach in South Carolina, shot at sunset. I converted the image to a slide transparency, exposed it onto a 4x5 Polaroid, then boiled the Polaroid to remove the emulsion layer. With the emulsion floating in hot water, I slid it onto a piece of watercolor paper and molded the wet image around to make it all liquidy and abstract. Fun stuff!
Category Photography / Scenery
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 398 x 521px
File Size 130 kB
That's a really good question -- I don't think so. Their usual film is a copy of 600 film, which doesn't really work for transfers, peels, that kind of stuff. You can rub the back while it's developing to alter the photo, but that's the most you can do.
Transfers/peels need the 669 peel-apart type of Polaroid film, also known as "packfilm" or "type 660".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Instant_film#Packfilm
Transfers/peels need the 669 peel-apart type of Polaroid film, also known as "packfilm" or "type 660".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Instant_film#Packfilm
Hmm apparently when you cut open the 600 type film, you can also transfer it:
https://skink74.wordpress.com/2011/.....art-1-peeling/
Going to try that sometime :)
https://skink74.wordpress.com/2011/.....art-1-peeling/
Going to try that sometime :)
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