| Polaroid 600 Film Twin Pack | 
enlarge | List Price: $39.99 Buy New: $29.85 You Save: $10.14 (25%)
Buy New from $29.85
Avg. Customer Rating:   (based on 19 reviews) Category: Photography
Publisher: Polaroid Studio: Polaroid Brand: Polaroid Label: Polaroid Media: Electronics Fragile: 0 Batteries Included: 1 Size: Twin Pack Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7 Dimensions (in): 7 x 4 x 1.2
MPN: 623965 Model: 624-274 UPC: 074100239653 EAN: 0074100017305 ASIN: B00004RFC2
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
|
| Features:
| | High-definition instant color prints | | | Balanced for daylight and electronic flash exposure | | | 10 exposures per pack for a total of 20 | | | Fast developing time |
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description This is a general purpose, high speed, medium contrast, integral film for high definition instant color prints. Balanced for daylight and electronic flash exposure.This is a general purpose, high speed, medium contrast, integral film for high definition instant color prints. Balanced for daylight and electronic flash exposure.
Amazon.com Product Description The Polaroid 600 Platinum film, offered here in a twin pack, is a general-purpose, high-speed, medium-contrast integral film for high-definition instant color prints. This film is balanced for daylight and electronic flash exposure. It can be used with Impulse, CoolCam, the One Step camera series, the 600 Business Edition, JobPro, EMS camera, the PhotoMagic system, the Special Event camera series, CB-70/71/72 camera backs, or compatible equipment made by other manufacturers. This film provides 10 quick-developing glossy exposures per pack.
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 14 more reviews...
  polaroid June 20, 2008 spent too much money at walgreens, so i ordered these instead. I can tell you i was not dissapointed.
  Got an SX-70? You CAN use 600 film if.. May 29, 2008 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
Hi.. you might have an old Polaroid SX-70 camera (introduced around 1973 at a retail price of $300.00 to $350.00).. sitting in a drawer or closet that you haven't used for years.. SX-70 film packs, which became Polaroid "Time Zero" film, have not been made for a few years.. and have vanished from stores.. about the only place to find it is at that huge online auction site i won't name but you know who i'm talking about.. and Time Zero film sells for insane prices.. so you're asking yourself, can i use Polaroid 600 film packs in my SX-70 camera?.. well the answer is yes and no.. first the no part..
600 film has an ASA speed of 600.. Time Zero film was two stops slower.. the SX-70 has NO film speed adjustment.. PLUS, 600 film packs, although they look identical to Time Zero film packs, also have some little metal tabs on them that Time Zero film packs don't have.. which means you have to go through a song and dance just to get one to fit into an SX-70.. and then if you shoot pictures, they'll come out totally washed-out and over-exposed because the SX-70 can't handle the much faster 600 speed film.. so what to do?..
well, the SX-70 CAN be modified in a number of ways to let it use 600 film and expose it correctly for excellent results.. AND to get around those nasty little tabs on the 600 film pack cartridges so it slides right in just like Time Zero film..
so it's both a physical modification to the camera, PLUS an electronic modification to its internal circuit board to fool its light sensor into using 600 film packs..
you can buy a Neutral Density (ND) filter that snaps on over the little light sensor window on the front of the camera next to the shooting lens, but that's a "band-aid" solution, as the filter sticks out, preventing you from folding the camera back down unless you take the filter off..
you can hack the built-in light sensor window and install a round piece of plastic to change the light sensor's behavior, if you have the nerve and the skills and the tools to do the physical mod yourself.. then you also have to do a physical mod to the film pack slot so a 600 pack will slide in, getting around those little metal tabs problem..
the ultimate solution is to have a pro make both an internal electronic modification to adjust the camera's light sensor circuitry to be happy with 600 film, AND make the physical mod to the film-loading slot so the 600 packs slide right in just like good old Time Zero packs did.. this is what i had done to my Vintage 1973 SX-70.. it cost me $100.00 for these modifications, but i dealt with a local pro who has done it to hundreds of SX-70 cameras.. as Amazon probably doesn't like reviewers linking to external Web sites, i'm not going to link to the site that belongs to the guy who modded my SX-70 for me.. you'll have to do some searching around yourself, and you'll find Web sites that explain how to do these mods yourself, as well as the site that belongs to the guy who did the mod for me.. since he was local to me, he picked up my camera, did the mods, and brought it back the next day..
then i went to a local store and bought a few fresh packs of 600 film, and this 35 year old camera now has a new lease on life.. it accepts the 600 film packs without any hassle, correctly exposes it, and i get excellent results, and at about $12.00 to $13.00 a pack, Polaroid 600 film is basically the same price as Time Zero film was years ago when it was in stores.. so you pay about $1.30 per shot..
if you visit polaroid.com and read their news area, you'll learn that they are phasing out ALL their instant films (many like Time Zero are already long-gone).. and come the end of 2009, there won't be ANY new 600 film produced any more.. so if you have one of Polaroid's later, cheaper cameras like the One-Step, and you want to keep using it, stock up on 600 film while it's still out there.. if you store it SEALED in its box in your refrigerator, it'll extend its expiration from months to up to a year.. just don't freeze it!.. and if you do store it in your refrigerator, before you plan to use it, take it out of cold Storage and let it sit at room temperature for at least two hours.. (this directly from the mouth of a Polaroid rep i just spoke with)..
if you want to use the still-produced 600 film in your old SX-70 (regular or Sonar auto-focus models).. you'll need to modify the camera both physically and electronically, but if done correctly, 600 film WILL work correctly in a modified SX-70.. there's no reason your former $350.00 camera has to spend the rest of its life as a paperweight..
if you want to keep using Time Zero film, you'll pay as much for a couple of packs as a professional modification to the camera costs..
  cheap prices April 7, 2008 buying a twin pack of polaroid film on amazon is around half as expensive as it is buying it at CVS or other stores.... normally at CVS, a regular 600 film pack, (NOT a twin) is around $20. FOR TEN PICTURES!!!! ridiculous. go amazon, much cheaper.
  Fresh well packed film April 6, 2008 I purchased two, two packs of Poloroid Film. The film came extremely well packed, fresh and takes clear Poloroid pictures. Very happy with the purchase.
  the film is great! October 11, 2007 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
I bought this film along with a polaroid camera for my daughter and she is very pleased with it
|
|
|