Elsa Dorfman's Polaroid 20x24 Camera and Portrait Studio Factoidspart of http://elsa.photo.net |
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Elsa's FAQ for the Polaroid 20x24:1. There are six cameras: in Polaroid studios in New York City and Prague, in the Calument Photo Store,in Berkeley, CA, at the Rowland Foundation in Cambridge, MA., and my studio in Cambridge, MA. One camera rotates among several colleges as part of the Polaroid Corporation College Program. 2. I rent Camera #4
from the Polaroid Corporation. I have been using the camera since 1980,
at
3. I use Polaroid Polacolor ER instant color film. ASA 80. There is
another color film and black and
4. The camera is 25.2" wide and 40.94" long and 59.06" high. There is a crank to raise and lower it. It is actually a simple box, with a hole in the front for the lense and a Polaroid film processor built into the back door. It isn't as complicated as modern 35mm cameras I am sure. There is a tray for pods which hold the chemicals. Each exposure has its own pod. I have been told by clients who are engineers that the pod mechanism of the Polaroid camera is one of the 7 wonders of the world!!! It is amazing that the pod opens up by the force of the rollers and spreads evenly to transfer the image from the negative to the positive. 5. The camera weighs about 200 lbs. It has a presence, because of the bellows, the bulk, its height. Its gravitas. 6. I use only one lense w/ the camera. Made in Chicago, it is
600 mm, f 11.0. The closest I can get is about 10"
7. The Camera is mounted on a mobile frame, sort of like a supermarket
wagon frame. It is very hard to move the camera in a straight line, because
the wheels like to zig and zag. The camera can be raised and
8. To see the image, I look through a fresnel plate with a transparent
strip down the middle. Everything is
9. I usually let the film develop for 70 sec. before peeling
it apart. There is a digital timer on the side of
10. A case of film includes a roll of negative, three rolls of positive
(because the positive is thicker
11. I use Broncolor strobes
because I was told they are very good for non-technical people like myself.
12. The negative goes up and
down with a string and piece of doublebacked sticky tape!! Totally
13. The film comes out of the BOTTOM of the camera. I always feel I
am delivering a baby or
14. I operate the camera myself these days. For the first seven years
that I used the camera, I worked
15. When the camera breaks, I start to pray. I call a cadre of people
who used to work at Polaroid and
16. I love the camera and its history. I love the fact that so many people who worked camera are still devoted to it. I love the fact that it is quirky and unpredictable and seems to have its own soul. Elsa's FAQ for the Studio1. I share my studio with photo maven, Philip Greenspun. The ceiling rods and second seamless arehis innovation. So is the radio!!! 2. I collect wild chairs and benches for people to sit on. One of the
most popular is the bench Alex and
3. I use 12' white Superior Seamless. Amazingly, I can't use Savage
Seamless because the core is a
4. The studio is divided into two rooms: one room is the camera room. The second room is a sort of gallery/playroom/chair room with a blue carpet on the floor and replica prints of my portraits on the walls. I also have a fabulous neon sign w/ my name, made by Neonwilliams, Allston, MA, on the wall. 5. The camera room is about 15' wide and about 24' long. Barely wide
enough and long enough, but it
6. . On the floor of the camera room
I have marked w/ magic marker on the industrial tiles where the camera
wheels
(elsad@comcast.net)
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