Polaroid Camera

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Edwin Land and the First Synthetic Sheet Polarizer (Save Polaroid)

Edwin Land (a physicist) came to the forefront of photographic technology in 1929 when he created the first synthetic sheet polarizer; thus solving "one of science’s long-standing 'unsolvable' problems – polarizing light without needing a large crystal of an esoteric mineral" (Save Polaroid).


Creation

Dr. Edwin Land founded the Polaroid Corporation in 1937. However, the idea of an instant camera (and subsequently instant photography) wasn’t envisioned by Dr. Land until 1943 in response to his 3-year-old daughter’s confusion as to why a camera could not instantly produce pictures – “Why can’t I see them now?” (New York Times).

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Edwin Land (New York Times)

Dr. Land was responsible for overseeing the development of products for the Polaroid Corporation – including the first instant camera. In 1947 the concept of instant photography was presented to The Optical Society in New York City and shortly after, in 1948, Polaroid 95 Instant photography became available to the public with the Polaroid Model 95 camera (also referred to as the Polaroid Land Camera) and Type 40 film. The Polaroid Land Camera was welcomed and widely accepted by consumer markets – even with a $95 price-tag (approximately $850 today) the cameras flew off shelves and sold out in a matter of weeks. The demand for the new camera was so great that backorders began being taken and consumers started to pay up to $150 (approximately $1350 today) for the new instant photography device (Save Polaroid).

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Polaroid Model 95 (Save Polaroid)

How it Works

Uses

Different Models

Public Reception

Controversy and Lawsuit

Fall

Death

Future