![]() All spectra film works in all the spectra/image line up of cameras. Just buy one and use the rest of your money on film. The cameras compact enough to keep in the glove box or backpack. INSTAX Wide Black Instant film is available in a box of 10 sheets and is compatible with INSTAX Wide instant cameras and the Link Wide Smartphone Printer. There really isn't any accessories for this particular camera, but the other spectra cameras due. Explore your creative side with the INSTAX Wide Black Instant film which features a simple black border design on a 3' x 5' size INSTAX photo. Loading is easy like any other Polaroid and closing the camera is just as easy with a push on the lower tab on the back. Just like allot of the Polaroids (other than sx70/680/690) what you see is basically what you get in the picture that comes out. The Camera is not complicated to open, as that is done by a button on the view finder. Its also great to experiment with, like emulsion lifts, weird color shifts with old film, or scanning and making poster size Polaroid prints. The pricing for the film is quite high but for the wider format picture you get, it's well worth it( don't buy super old fim as the chemicals will have dried up and wont spread evenly). You can still get film through Impossible Project and here on Ebay. I like that its easy to use and a great conversational piece. Its unique and is as basic a point and shoot as it gets. I bought this product because I am a Polaroid freak. ![]() ![]() No multiple exposure support Read full review No lighten/darken exposure control function No distance measurement information, since autofocus is non-sonar Wider angle lens than previous models, captures more information They have a lot more controllability, more features and more creative possibilities.Ĭan use 1200 film, which has 12 exposures instead of only 10 For anyone wanting a camera with more control, I woul d suggest a Spectra System camera or a Spectra Pro camera. This is a camera for people who want to take advantage of the higher quality and larger format of Spectra and 1200 film, and not much else. I would not suggest this camera for anyone planning to do anything very creative with this camera. This camera has almost no control, besides the physical focus lens switch between normal shooting and 'close-up'. Other earlier Spectra cameras have a flash override switch, which lets you turn it off when you want. The Spectra film is otherwise the same as 600. The Spectra film (called 'Image' outside North America) differs from 600 integral films in that it has a different image format: the 600 film is a square, while the Spectra film is a rectangular 9.2 x 7.3 cm dimension. It was a completely new camera line, and there was a corresponding new film. This can get to be very annoying when you want to use beautiful natural light instead of the harsh flash. Polaroid introduced the Spectra camera system in 1986. I popped some film in and tested it, and here's what I found.Įven in bright daylight, this camera always fires the flash. I found this camera at a thrift store in perfect condition.
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