Thank you,
Deshawn
Perhaps I don't understand the question. Both are (nominally) fast
panchromatic films; although the Polaroid was a color film, that
emulsion would be sensitive to all colors. Presumably there would be
some far infra-red light where they would not respond. Far infrared
is not convenient to view unless you have an IR detector.
"Perhaps I don't understand the question. Both are (nominally) fast
panchromatic films; although the Polaroid was a color film, that
emulsion would be sensitive to all colors. Presumably there would be
some far infra-red light where they would not respond. Far infrared
is not convenient to view unless you have an IR detector."
Thanks, Peter, let me rephrase/ explain further....
I have a "portable darkroom" actually used to process x-ray films and I'd
like to be able to use it with either Polaroid 600 instant or Fuji fp-3000b
film. The darkroom's original purpose was to allow for fast processing of
dental x-ray b&w film. There is an amber cover that allows the processer to
see what occurs as the film is processed through the solutions. I was
asking if I could process the aforementioned (actually safely work with, not
process) the instant films in this portable darkroom, viewing through the
amber window, without either/ both of the instant films becoming exposed.
Thanks,
Deshawn
> I have a "portable darkroom" actually used to process x-ray films and I'd
> like to be able to use it with either Polaroid 600 instant or Fuji fp-3000b
> film. The darkroom's original purpose was to allow for fast processing of
> dental x-ray b&w film. There is an amber cover that allows the processer to
> see what occurs as the film is processed through the solutions. I was
> asking if I could process the aforementioned (actually safely work with, not
> process) the instant films in this portable darkroom, viewing through the
> amber window, without either/ both of the instant films becoming exposed.
In a word, no.
--
Found--the gene that causes belief in genetic determinism
Polaroid 600 is a integral self developing film, it shoots out of the
camera and processes in daylight. FP-3000 is a peel apart film, shoot
it, pull it through the rollers wait the allotted time and peel it
apart. Neither needs a darkroom or can be used in a darkroom.
>Polaroid 600 is a integral self developing film, it shoots out of the
>camera
How far?
;-)
Normally just shoots out the bottom and stops hanging out of the
camera but I had one Instant cam that would shoot the film about three
feet! BTW there's a whole cult of recyclers that use the integral
batteries in these packs for all sorts of things. For their day, they
had amazing power to weight ratio.