Lets see... Digital Cameras came into play and the luxury of deleting/editing/ blink detection were very much favored, opposed to One-click-there-you-go (polaroid pictures), because with the polaroid, you got 1 chance to take that picture, and if some one had their eyes closed or moved or if the picture was just plain blurry, it got instantly developed, and by then, the people had moved from their position and you could waste too many polaroid pictures (which were not cheap) just trying to get a nice picture. With Digital cameras, you could take a picture per second, and you could delete, edit, etc. And with the Digital, you couldget your pictures developed OR even print them out on your computer. And many, many other reasons that im not going to list because it would take forever, and you obviously know as many reasons as I do on why we love our digital cameras.
~Flashie
pictures printed out of polaroid cameras just after taken
pictures printed out of polaroid cameras just after taken
The Polaroid 600 series features a camera that takes instant color pictures, the pictures are much wider and are of higher quality than it's predecessors in the Polaroid family.
Get an ipor
How do I restore a cracked Polaroid Picture? It's about 30 years old.
Polaroid 600 film is best for taking pictures in a Polaroid instant camera. You can purchase unexpired Polaroid film for this purpose. It is best suited to informal photographs and snapshots.
A polaroid camera
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 cameras can be found online, on websites like Amazon, and eBay. You can also occasionally find them in pawn shops, or around in antique stores.
Polaroid cameras are cameras that print instantly having a picture been taken. I would not recommend this camera unless the person buying this does not intend to have the pictures digitized.
No, polaroid camera film is currently not being manufactured due to the new technology of digital cameras and digital camcorders. They don't even make film cameras hardly at all anymore.
The Polaroid Camera first hit the market in 1948, since then we have seen technological advances that far surpass the first cameras which has severely reduced the size and quality of pictures taken.