My SX/70 Sonar

The Polaroid SX/70 Sonar

. The high of Polaroid engineering is represented in the Polaroid SX/70 Land Camera. Unlike earlier rangefinder focused Land Cameras and the later focus free models, the SX/70 is a single lens reflex camera. It used a system of lenses and mirrors to allow you to see exactly what you were about to photograph. This has made the SX/70 very popular with artists and professional photographers. I get a kick out of the fact that it even works at all.
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That is an advertisement for one of the sexiest cameras ever produced, the Polaroid SX/70. It shows how the SX/70 functions as an SLR. What makes the Sonar models special is that they use an inexpensive Sonar device as autofocus. I heard a rumor that Polaroid made the Sonar parts available as a kit so that home hobbyists could easily add the SX/70’s Sonar capabilities to their own projects. The Sonar models were mostly available in black with the regular SX/70 models came in a beautiful brown leather.

I think the SX/70 is sexy because when folded it up it is a really cool, skinny shape.

sx70sonarside

Why Buy The SX/70?

The SX/70 is a very technologically advanced camera that produces beautiful results. You can use old Time/Zero film in it or you can buy a new emulsion from The Impossible Project. It will produce an original photograph that is very high quality with very special qualities.

Where To Buy Your Own Polaroid SX/70

Junkshops: Junkshops and flea markets are filled to the brim with Polaroid Cameras waiting for you to love them. After looking through many junk shops for an SX/70 I believe all of them have been sold to art students.
Ebay: Where I buy most of my film and my sx/70.
The Impossible Shop: They are expensive but you can find an functional SX/70.

Where To Buy Film For Your Polaroid SX/70

There is still an amble but expensive supply of Time Zero film on Ebay.

The Impossible Project currently sells a Polaroid Time-Zero compatible film called PX100. You can find it at their physical store in NYC or online. You can also buy deadstock Polaroid films like TZ Artistic and Polaroid Fade to Black.

Film For SX/70 Time Zero

The Impossible  Project Integral Film

PX100 Silver Shade FF

PX100 is a 100 speed integral film available for cameras that take SX/70 Time Zero film. I’ve tested it and I’ve mixed results. It is fun but rather unique. My posts using PX100.

This Grand And Magnificent Emulsion
My Last PX100 Shot

Polaroid SX/70 Time Zero

There are still some original time/zero film available to purchase although all of it is now expired.
TZ Artistic Fade To Black
Fade to black is an interesting film. As soon as the film starts to develop it also begins to darken and eventually the image disappears.

PX 70 First Flush Color Shade

This is impossible new integral film for the SX/70. I have yet to try it but the samples look interesting.

This Grand And Magnificent Emulsion

PX100 First Flush In My SX/70 & The White Mountains

I like to find connections between the technology and nature, specifically how advances in technology can radically change how we view and interact with specific spaces. I chose to test my first samples of Impossible’s PX100 in the White Mountains of New Hampshire because, there it is quite easy to see how technological advances introduced as part of the industrial revolution helped change, commodify and ultimately conserve natural spaces. I believe that with the introduction of PX100 instant photography is following the same path.

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The summit of Elephant’s trunk looking toward Crawford’s Notch. The first impossible project. My first shot with Impossible PX100 using my SX/70 Sonar.

For most of the history of Crawford Notch, it was thought to be impassible. A usable road would vastly speed up travel between the White Mountains and Maine therefore a hefty reward was offered for anyone who could successfully build a path through it. The first path was probably a lot like PX100; new, rough and a whole lot o fun.

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During the latter part of the 1800s the White Mountains were the premier destination for the New England’s wealthy industrial elite. They offered a place to conspicuously consume and an escape from horrid inner city conditions caused by the vacationers own industrial interests. Industrialists were buying and creating value in land that was not intended to have a use but rather to be visually appealing. I believe we are seeing something similar in the resurgance of certain types of niche analog cameras. The cameras marketed by Lomography are particular examples of items that are valued now for different reasons than when they were originally produced.

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As guests to the White Mountains demanded better and more luxurious accommodations the resorts responded by combing large parcels of land into nature theme parks that offered luxuries not found in more urban areas of New Hampshire. The first modern skyscraper in New Hampshire was not built in the state’s largest city of Manchester but constructed horizontally in Dixville Notch as The Balsam.

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This Impossible PX100 Stuff

I was originally unimpressed by the look of PX100, it felt to me like an unfinished product that had been rushed to market to meet a deadline. However, I started noticing similarities between very early photographic methods and the samples of PX100 on the web. I don’t think PX100 is a snapshot film like my grandmother’s Polaroids but something closer to an instant daguerrotype or albumen print. I took my first PX100 shots in Crawford Notch because I felt the landscape and the qualities of the film would go well together and they both have co-occuring histories of impossibility and technological advances.

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My Impossible PX100 FF SX/70 Process

1. Climb mountain/trudge through snow/park car.

2. Put Polaroid cold clip in armpit to warm it up.

3. Take picture with SX/70.

4. Return cold clip to armpit with impossible PX100 FF shot in it.

5. Wait a couple minutes.

6. Stare in amazement.

Cool-Useful Polaroid and Impossible Links

I took the title from this post from the amazing This Grand & Magnificent Place.
You can buy PX100 from The Impossible Project
I bought my sx/70 on ebay and surprisingly, got it for a good price.

Thanks

The talent abundant Brian Henry for giving me PX100 tips.
The author of This Grand and Magnificent Place for giving me a good title to copy.