Category Archives: Polaroid

Giant Polaroids in DUMBO

Untitled, from Asser Levy Pool. 2010 (c) Greg Miller

Dunno if we have any readers in NYC, but I wish I were there to see these myself.  Photographer Greg Miller is exhibiting his giant 20 * 24 inch polaroids from the Asser Levy Pool at Gallery 224 in Brooklyn. This is what he says on his blog

Here is your opportunity to see, in person, the Asser Levy 20×24 Polaroids I have been telling you about.  They will be on view in the back room at +Kris Graves Projects, 111 Front St., Gallery 224, DUMBO, Brooklyn, starting Tomorrow, Sept 2 until Oct 30.  Also showing in the main room is the dark landscape work of Andreas Gehrke so you don’t want to miss this one.  I will be attending the opening tomorrow from 6-8:30.  If you are reading this, you are invited.  Seeing the 20×24 Polaroids in person is nothing like seeing them as jpgs, believe me.  I still can’t take my eyes off them.

Wish I could see them …

– Rory

2024 Silly season

Untitled #5, from Asser Levy Pool. 2010. 20x24 Polaroid. (c) Greg Miller

I blame kids off school, bike rides in the woods, weddings, camping and The Wire. It’s the silly season and no doubt I have neglected the blog a bit. Blogging is a bit like printing in the darkroom – at this time of the year you’d rather be outside, just hanging.

A bit like Greg Miller who hung out at the Asser Levy Pool – an outdoor pool in Manhattan. He didn’t have his camera phone or some digicam with him. He didn’t have a nice 35mm slr, fancy pants medium format ‘blad, or some big n’ bendy 4*5 neither. Nope, he brought with him a 20*24 inch giant polaroid camera and the results, like the one above are just, well, dope (as the kids might say in NYC).

The 20x24 Polaroid Camera. Photo courtesy 20x24 Studio.

I have no idea what this super rare polaroid film must cost.  20*24 – I mean that’s two feet long on the long edge and just under that on the short edge. When you bring paper that size into the darkroom, you have some negative that you have already selected from a contact print, test printed at maybe 8*10, hummed and hawed a bit, and maybe then decided that perhaps it’s good enough for a sheet of that 20*24 paper from the box of 25 that you bought from Gunn’s on Wexford St. six months ago, and don’t want to waste ‘cos it’s well, a bit expensive.

You get a lend of the 20*24 Polaroid camera though, and you have no negative to choose from. You are there, with your subject, with your shot, and when you open that shutter you gotta hope you get it right.

And then, right in front of the people who have just posed for you, you reveal the print. The giant, 20*24 inch, full technicolour print right there in front of you, moments after it has been shot. Magic.

Photographer Greg Miller wrote about the day on his blog here. From what I can see on the web, the photographs are just beautiful. I’d love to see them in real life – I’m sure the screen does them no justice.

– Rory

Craig Doyle Impossible Project customer

Couldn’t help notice in Saturday’s paper, that Craig Doyle, a Polaroid SX-70 user, was helping some broadband provider sell their wares. I wonder does Craig have a freezer load of old Time Zero Polaroid film for the camera, or has he invested in the recently released new version of the film from the Impossible Project?

– Rory

Uh oh – Impossible Project impossible?

Impossible?

This image is one taken by the British Journal of Phototgraphy using the Impossible Project’s new “polaroid” film. It’s the best of the lot that they got from their press pack. Oops. Doesn’t look good. Read the BJP article here.

Could be a problem with an early production pack, but I won’t be parting with any cash for this stuff yet. Pity …

– Rory

Return of Polaroid film!

For optimized results, please:

1. Develop at a temperature between 17-24°C
2. Immediately protect from direct light
3. Caress with all your analog heart

According to Amateur Photographer, The Impossible Project will begin to sell new B+W instant film for traditional Polaroid 600 and SX70 cameras from this week. Won’t be cheap, at €18 per pack, but Polaroid lovers can rejoice that it will be possible to indulge in occaisonal instant film fun!

Read more here and here

– Rory