Faded - Recovered - Scanned - Delight
Saturday, February 18, 2017
Many years ago when film was plentiful and Polaroid made
film for my médium format RB-67 I used to peel the photographs from my Polaroid
back and throw them away.
Photographers have a way of not following rules so soon a
few had found out that the peels (they were negative-like) of Polaroid Colour
Instant Film did not fade and that they could be scanned. It seems that Polaroid
peels (as I call them) were in wait of a technology (scanners) that made them
relevant and in many ways quite beautiful.
Polaroid Instant Film (not the Instamatic kind) is dead. For
a few years we photographers switched to unusually good Fuji Film FP-300B B+W and
FP-100C Colour. The former now discontinued produced negatives that partially solarized. The scanning results were most interesting. The latter colour film
has been recently discontinued but there are rumours that Fuji is going to
manufacture it in batches.
The initial problem with the Fuji Instant Colour peels is
that the image fades in short minutes. I have been able to take the peel to a
waiting scanner and produce a sort of Polaroid transfer (as they used to be
called). The peel itself when carefully bleached makes a strange sort-of-negative.
My friend baroque bassist Curtis Daily and I compared notes on the process and
have found a foolproof method for bleaching them without flaws.
I have a box with at least 100 of these that now that
Daily and I have our method, I will be treating in the near future.
This one of
Lauren is a tad underexposed but with the help of m 13-year-old Photoshop and
Corel XII’s “Clarify” tool I have been
able to get a lovely image of her that makes me smile when I look at it.