Another Polaroid transfer from the "hey, a pile of old photos in a box!" archive.
This was taken at Conwy Castle in Wales; the bird kept staring at me until I took his photo. Camera hog! ( http://www.castlewales.com/conwy.html )
This sort of Polaroid transfer is done by peeling apart the Polaroid while it's still developing and slapping it down on a piece of wet paper. After a few seconds, you carefully peel it up and see what happens. In this case, all the dark bits peeled up, leaving green washed out areas that look pretty neat anyway!
This was taken at Conwy Castle in Wales; the bird kept staring at me until I took his photo. Camera hog! ( http://www.castlewales.com/conwy.html )
This sort of Polaroid transfer is done by peeling apart the Polaroid while it's still developing and slapping it down on a piece of wet paper. After a few seconds, you carefully peel it up and see what happens. In this case, all the dark bits peeled up, leaving green washed out areas that look pretty neat anyway!
Category Photography / Animal related (non-anthro)
Species Avian (Other)
Size 534 x 429px
File Size 150.7 kB
It's easy and fun!
All you need is one of these doohickeys:
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=360166944972
You also need some Polaroid 669 film and some watercolor paper. And some 35mm slides.
Soak the paper in saltwater. Put the slide & film in the printer, expose the film, pull it apart right away and slap it down on the wet paper. Peel it up after about a minute really carefullly and tada!
All you need is one of these doohickeys:
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=360166944972
You also need some Polaroid 669 film and some watercolor paper. And some 35mm slides.
Soak the paper in saltwater. Put the slide & film in the printer, expose the film, pull it apart right away and slap it down on the wet paper. Peel it up after about a minute really carefullly and tada!
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