Ironically, the popularity of digital apps such as Hipstamatic and Instagram have revitalized the near corpse that was instant analog film technology. Located in Holland, the last remaining Polaroid production plant has been purchased and resuscitated by 10 former employees who shared a passion and a dream to save instant film from extinction. Calling it the Impossible Project, they prevented 300,000 perfectly functioning cameras from becoming obsolete while inventing and producing totally new instant film for use in traditional Polaroid cameras. Starting from scratch as Polaroid color dyes are no longer available, the team had one year to devise a functional film system. Several different silver tone and color films were the result of thousands of laboratory hours and decades of joined experience. Original Polaroid cameras and Impossible film are available for purchase on the company website and in stores throughout the US.
-Jayme Catalano
hi. nice post. i’ve actually been shooting Impossible for these last few months and have dedicated a site to my adventures. hope you like it (and feel free to use any photos should you like). http://zoophotos.wordpress.com
Your photos are great! I put a link up on our Facebook page. Happy shooting!
Beautiful photos!
Love Impossible, both their products and what they are doing, really impresive!
I have a SX70 and am struggling to learn to handle it, really really love the looks of SX70!
Good luck! Analog technology can be frustrating but I think it’s so worth the result.