Sort by time | Sort by thread (beta)

Link to this comment:

Share to:

All Comments (23)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • can I do this with a Fujifilm intax 200???

  • what happened to the print?

  • can you do this on any surface like I was thinking of a coffee mug, a ceramic tile or even a t-shirt?

  • You can do this with the quick-drying Fuji by carefully removing the exposed undeveloped negative in complete darkness and using a marker or smooth rolling pin to squish the chemicals between the negative and receptor surface. The trick is to get all this straight in total darkness. And also, who has a darkroom any more ? (kind of required for working with 3000 speed b&w)

  • When doing this technique do you still end up with a print on the fuji paper?

  • That's hilarious and awesome.

  • nice. can this work with the Fujifilm-FP100 polaroid film replacement??? I'm assuming so, but I'm new to this stuff. Thanks

  • I couldn't tell what the picture was of. Tell me.

  • Would you be able to tell me what model Polaroid camera you are using in this video? I'd love to get into this

  • it's a polaroid 210 land camera. i suggest you don't buy it though.. the quality of the picture looks really bad when you transfer it

    you should just get a 35mm film instant film scanner. like the vivitar one which is like 30 dollars on ebay

  • I wanted to do an art project with an old photo- will a ten year old photo or even older work with this?

  • You can't do what the poster did, which is called an "Image Transfer", with an already developed Polaroid image. However, you can put it in 150 Fahrenheit water and wait about 3-5 minutes for the emulsion to get soft. You can rub and lift the emulsion off onto a piece of clear acetate and then transfer it to your medium of choice. These are called "emulsion lifts", do some research on Google. However, realize that very dark images will have trouble and Polaroid type 669 / 88 / 59 works best.

  • thanks it gives a cool effect to images i like the idea...i love art

  • ps damn i year later reply lol

  • okay?

  • where do you get the film??

  • Go to local pro photo shop (look in the phone book...they have em') or buy the film from a good online retailer like B&H or Adorama.

    Also Polaroid stopped making all film like about a month ago (I'm still not sure)...but Fujifilm still makes a packfilm equivalent.

  • You might still be able to get Polaroid 669, 59 or 88 from Impossible (formerly Polapremium). These are the guys that bought everything that was left from Polaroid, over 500,000 boxes of film. They are former employees, based in the Netherlands, and they are also doing all the research and development to make new Polaroid films. 669 is what the poster is using. 88 is a square version, and 59 is large format (almost double the size of the poster's film) but you need a 4x5 camera and holder.

  • Wow very nice, just try to keep your mouth closed..... the pulsating lips were distracting :P

  • hahahaha thats the face of pure concentration

  • Yes, I can do the SX-70 film manipulation. I don't have very much manipulable SX-70 film left, so I might or might not upload a video of it (I'm not very good).

  • oooohhh!

    dude You're great!

    Best ever ghetto transfer.

    Are you able to do sx70 film manipulation?

  • Pretty cool man

Loading...
Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more