Rotstich bei Polaroid Bildern?

Ich habe als Geschenk eine Polaroid Go Generation 2 bekommen. Jetzt habe ich mir mein erstes Päckchen mit Filmen beim Hartlauer gekauft und grade gesehen dass diese am 24.04.2024 abgelaufen sind. (Heute ist der 21.07.2024)

-> könnte es sein, dass die abgelaufenen Filme der Grund sind, wieso meine Bilder einen Rotstich haben oder ist es weil ich die Kamera falsch benutze. Oder gehören die Bilder vielleicht einfach so. (Habe nicht viel Erfahrung mit Polaroid)

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GammaFoto
8 months ago

It could be that the films that have been run are the reason why my pictures have a reddish or it’s because I misuse the camera.

No, just because they’re a little “over” shouldn’t make a big difference.

Or maybe the pictures are just that.

Well, I’m telling Jein.
the “hearing” not really like that and you don’t use the camera wrong, it’s rather that the company “Impossible” which is basically behind the brand Polarod today, just has ever had problems making reasonable films!

Polaroid doesn’t exist anymore, they’ve gone to Pleite many years ago.
After that, a company called “The impossible Project” or just “Impossible” has bought a former work of Polaroid and a whole lot of old material to make films for Polroid cameras again.

But they had massive problems from the very beginning, which they seem to have not come to grips with today. The films are not uniform and also not really “good” (in comparison to the previous “real” Polaroid films), as you see there are color engravings, and also the images can easily become too bright or too dark, and also each time differently, you can have a reddish today when the next film is a purple-tinged (I had for example), so your pictures will always be different. Likewise, the films need to be developed forever, when the “real” polaroids were about 2-3 minutes, we have to wait 15 to 20 or even 30 minutes…

Many years ago, I’ve been told that you’re trying to get involved with a former chemist from Polaroid who’s going to run things… I don’t think there’s anything going on…

Even though “Polaroid” is on the packaging again today, there is no real “poliaroid” in it for a long time, it is still this company “Impossible”. Only because then in insolvency the rights of names and trademarks were made to money and now the company and the brand name “Polaroid” have been found together again by an investor, they are now also allowed to “poliaroid” on it, but everything has nothing to do with the right polarod of the past, and unfortunately this is also seen in the pictures.

Uneternal
8 months ago

So if you want photos with perfect photo quality and lively colors, instant image cameras are the absolutely wrong solution.

By the way, I would object to the movie if he had already run. Have a nice discount on it.

PaterAlfonso
8 months ago

Yeah, it could be at the age of the movies. With the camera’s settings nothing can lead to such a reddish.

But it can also be that the films are so bad today. I still know the original Polaroids. They weren’t the best of the best, but they were already halfway true.

IXXIac
8 months ago

Hello

Impossible polaroid films tend from 25° C. to orange stitch or it becomes brown/sepia at 30° C. red and from 35° C. Camera with film is transported in a “cooler bag” and keeps the content at 18-20°C optimal temperature because from 15°C the film becomes blue-tinged. Many put the film after it comes out of the camera right into a matching tempered “Darkbox” but at 35°C air temperature it is pointless to reddish compensation. But the darkbox prevents the color barrier.

“Kühlbags” for films by Agfa, Fuji, Kodak, Tiffen Darkboxen were built by themselves and a polaroid set was put together if you wanted to manipulate the picture. There is a craft that is lost but today there are smartphones with Photoshop,,