Mickey,
Yes, Type 665 is the P/N pack film
Good Luck
James
many folks believe
"> Polaroid P/N Type 55 film is the type that you must expose for either
the
> negative or the print. It is an either or proposition"
This is not always the case!
When the lighting is lower in contrast you can expose for a good print and
get a good negative at the same time bec
Stom,
Polaroid P/N Type 55 film is the type that you must expose for either the
negative or the print. It is an either or proposition.
The Polaroid P/N pack film (the number of which I can't remember) is not an
either or proposition. The print and negative will match.
James Johnston
james
Kosinski Family wrote:
> What I'd like to know is how to get a darkroom print that
> matches the beautiful Polaroid print tones!
>
Here is the secret: The negative and positive that you get
from Type 55 film do not have quite the same exposure
characteristics. You can either expose fo
Last summer I saw an article in the Seattle Times about a photographer
named Roseanne Olson who takes pinhole photographs on Polaroid 55 film.
Although I have not yet used this film myself, it was seeing these
photographs that impelled me to take up pinhole photography. You can
read the article and
In a message dated 5/25/01 12:13:26 PM, o...@maine.edu writes:
<< I would appreciate any thoughts about this particular film for this
purpose. Thanks.
>>
It great stuffbut very sensitive to scratches, etc. Requires very
delicate handling.
I used it for a series of 4" x "5 portraits.
To cl
Stom writes
"I am thinking about using Polaroid 4x5 T-55 Positive/Negative film for
pinhole photography. I would appreciate any thoughts about this particular
film for this purpose. Thanks."
Stom Ohno
o...@maine.edu
Type 55 is an excellent material, no doubt about it!
Handling the
I've just gotten into pinhole photography and started using Polaroid 4x5
T-55 film. It works wonderfully with my Santa Barbara wide angle camera.
It has great sharpness/resolution and decent contrast. My exposure times
vary from 7-10 seconds on a sunny day to 6 minutes on a very cloudy day. I
also
I used this film frequently with my 4X5 camera, but have never used it
for pinhole applications. It is quit slow (ISO 50) which could make
for some pretty long exposures. It is a wonderful film for enlarging,
plus you have the advantage of seeing your results within a minute.
Randy
--- Stom Oh