Fifty years ago today, photography changed forever. The 3,000-something people assembled at a Polaroid warehouse in Needham, Massachusetts were the first to hear the news from Polaroid ...
Sadly not in time for the holidays, but perhaps a treat for the new year – a project out of the Lego Ideas fan platform is about to bring the iconic OneStep SX-70 instant camera back to life through a ...
Contrary to what some consumers, amateur photographers and even die-hard techies might assume, instant photography has been around a lot longer than the digital camera and the smart phone. In fact, it ...
In 1972, Polaroid shared with the world its latest creation — the Polaroid SX–70 instant film camera. Designed by Polaroid co-founder and inventor Edwin Land, the SX–70 at that time received quite the ...
Today, most of us carry supercomputers in our pockets that happen to also take instantly-viewable pictures.This is something that even the dumbest phones do, meaning that we can reasonably draw the ...
One of Lego’s latest projects will strike at a lot of photographers’ nostalgia: a replica Polaroid OneStep SX-70 instant camera. Currently, there aren’t details about what the kit will actually look ...
The bevy of cameras on offer range from one featuring the classic SX-70 look, which retails for a bit less than the other six models ($730), to ones bedazzled and swathed in such luxury and decoration ...
The human mind deserves any number of admiring adjectives. But given its flair at misremembering the past, misjudging the present and misforecasting the future, “prescient” and “precise” are not among ...
The Polaroid SX-70 was the go-to camera for instant photography, and the Canon Rebel T5 is currently one of the most popular DSLRs on the market. What's changed since then?
On Nov. 26, 1948, the first “Land Camera” — now known as the instant Polaroid camera — went on sale at the Jordan Marsh department store in Boston for $89.75, HISTORY reports. The invention by Edwin H ...
A 50-year-old Polaroid SX-70 might not be built for the Winter Games. Or maybe it’s perfect. Credit... Supported by Photographs and Text by Gabriela Bhaskar Just 37.04 seconds. That’s how long it took ...
Today, most of us carry supercomputers in our pockets that happen to also take instantly-viewable pictures.This is something that even the dumbest phones do, meaning that we can reasonably draw the ...