Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Image Fusion Technology


Meg brought home a cool new camera from the thrift store that I just had to run some film through. Pretty happy with how it turned out. Not sure if you could actually get a dog-head mashup like advertised on the box however. More on my flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/austingullixson/



Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Impossible Project film


Got me some of the new instant film being made by the Impossible Project, the new version of the color film and I got to say I really like it. Looks like these guys are hitting their stride and getting some decent color but not too perfect like the fuji instax stuff. I like my polaroids to have some personality, or what's the point?

Monday, November 29, 2010

The End of Kodachrome


So December is the last month you will be able get your old Kodachrome film processed by Dwayne's in Kansas. In honor of the amazing film, I've created a Flickr pool for you to upload your old slides and related Kodachrome memorabilia:

http://www.flickr.com/groups/1536467@N24/

I'd love to see what you've got. Let's enjoy this final month of beautiful color!

Also, if you've got some old Kodachrome film, get it out and shoot it. You've got until December 30 to get it to Dwayne's. I've got five rolls I'm gonna try to burn through.

Sunday, October 31, 2010

New Adventures in Expired Film

Polaroid film is getting rarer and rarer by the day, even the 600 film thats two years expired is going for $40-$50 bones a pack. The new stuff by the Impossible Project is great and I'm really glad they're keeping the fire on instant film, but nothing compares to the formula and whatever crazy earth-killing chemicals Mr. Land used in his original films.

But what's rarer than all that is this pack of Polaroid 691 film for colorgraph overhead projection, as it says on the pack. Go back with me to the days before powerpoint and scanning stuff in and hastily throwing them together in a word doc for your next pitch and journey back to the mid-90's or earlier. With this film and your great overhead projector, you could photograph all your great talking points and really wow the room with full-color slides. I wonder what the pitch success rate was with this film, or if many folks used it. This box I got on ebay for a tidy sum expired in 1997 and the sticker on the back says they were discontinuing this film as of '98.

I've been sitting on this film for a few months now, waiting for something great to photograph that would seem worthy of its unique, possibly last-pack-on-the-earth greatness. After a while I just couldn't wait any longer and got the itch to load it up in my Land Camera Automatic 100 and fire away. Below is the first shot of some prairie restoration at North Mississippi Regional Park near my house on the northside of Minneapolis. It looks like the emulsion is already starting to dry up, but we'll see how the rest of the pack goes. It's hard to decide what to shoot when you know that these are the only 8 shots you're every going to get. If you've got any ideas, send them my way.

Thus, this is the great film-shooters dilemma. We have these great expired Polaroid films and want to save them for eternity, but if we wait too long, they'll just dry up and be unusable, their great potential never realized. Stay tuned, I'll post what becomes of the rest of the pack both here and on my Flickr page.

Friday, October 8, 2010

Collage Series for The Clover





I created a series of five collages for my work’s internal publication, The Clover. A lucky five received one of the originals, while the rest received a copy of one of the collages.

I also sized them as a wallpaper for your iPhone that you can download from my flickr page: http://www.flickr.com/photos/austingullixson/sets/72157625120361684/

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Kodak Bullet

I recently acquired yet another camera on ebay. I know, big shock there. But this one is slightly different from some of the other ones, and I was sold immediately on the cool 1930's bakelite design. Here's a scan of the negatives I developed last night from the first roll of 127 film. You can still get film for 127 cameras from any of the major photo shops on the web. I got mine from Freestyle Photo for about $7 a roll. They also had some infrared film for 127 cameras on clearance, so of course I got some of that, too.

Now, this camera has a cool screw-out lens that you're supposed to screw all the way out till it clicks, which I learned after I shot the first roll. Hence the funny cut-offs on the corners. I still kinda dig them though. I was kinda surprised at how exposed they got though, considering the film is only 100 speed. Perhaps the shutter isn't as fast as it once was in those crazy Bullet days of the '30's.

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Hidden treasures

Buying old cameras sometimes has hidden bonus treasures that normally would have long since been discarded. But in a recent thrift store find, along with bonus flash cubes and the nice rainbow one-step itself, is this nice piece of paper ephemera from a different time. It's only purpose was to inform the consumer how to stow all of their great Polaroid products in this tiny black sack. I'm guessing most of these were thrown out, but I'm thankful someone kept this little gem and I was lucky enough to come into possession of it. And now I share it with you. I love seeing "Printed in USA" on old stuff. We really used to produce some great products. Thanks, Meg for rescuing this and so many other great treasures from the dust bin.