One can request help to fix a Polaroid camera from the Polaroid website itself. Depending on what is wrong with the camera it may not be cost effective to repair and be a more viable option to buy new.
No. The newer Digital Polaroid camera Do take video. It will depend on the size of the sd card you have in the camera.
a Polaroid camera. Try googling it for suppliers.
No. Polaroids only print out their own paper photograph.
The Polaroid camera changed society by allowing police to take instant photos of crime scenes and suspects. It also started the trend of people wanting products that would give them instant gratification.
No, the first Polaroid -- the 1948 Polaroid 95 Land camera -- took sepia-tone pictures. Polaroid produced the first instant black-and-white instant film in 1950, and the first instant color film ("Panchromatic") in 1955.
Polaroid is the brand name of a type of film used to polarize light. The inventor, Edwin H. Land, later named the company he formed to sell the film (originally called Land-Wheelwright Laboratories, after himself and a wealthy backer who provided start-up money) Polaroid as well. The Polaroid Corporation is best known, however, for the instant camera (and the photographic film to go with it) that Land developed a few years later.
The polaroid cameras I've seen have had two separate beam paths, one for the view finder and another one for the optics that actually take the picture. If yours is like that, with the viewfinder basically a hole through the top of the camera, then it is as it should.
Does the Polaroid Spectra 1200 FF take a battery?
u may be able to find it at wall mart im not entirely sure --- Some good photographic suppliers still provide stock but it is scarce as the digital camera has taken over sorry... but it cant be found at walmart, staples, or office max. BUT, you can get it on the ace hardware website. it is originally for a camera that workers use for instant pictures, but it works for polariod.
The original ones were Polaroid instant cameras. They stopped making those to my knowledge but Fuji Film apparently bought it and now Fuji Film makes them but its name Fuji Film Instax. You can buy them online. The instant film paper things are not the cheapest though. Instant cameras. Both Kodak and Polaroid made them, but Polaroid is the one that survived.
IF you take a still shot and hold the camera steady, the shots will be very crisp and sharp. if you have troubloe holding still, get a tripod or other stand for it.
The subject might be too close to the camera. If it has a macro mode try turning that on