2005-09-03 // 00:00:49
centecente
I've see that in my comment is not visible the example, look to :
»link FAQ section to understand how to obtain a perfect hole closer for the filmpack

2005-09-02 // 23:58:51
centecente
Hy Nora
there are 2 way to obtain double exposures on Polaroid Sx 70 Camera
1_
The trick is to defeat the little hook thingy that shoves the film into the rollers. See the notch on the back left corner of the cassette? Cut a strip of thin steel that just slides into that notch on top of the film (maybe 3/16 wide and 1.5 inches long), and bend it into a cross-section something like the following:

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I cut the strip out of the lifter "spring" from an old cassette. I guess I made the "ramp" angle about 45 degrees. Its height should match the depth of the notch in the back of the cassette, so the vertical skirt is restrained by the back wall. (It's easier to do than to describe.)

You start with the cassette already loaded in the camera. In total darkness, pull the cassette back out of the camera and slide this device into the slot, with the bent part down and snugly against the back of the cassette. Then put the cassette back in the camera. Instead of ejecting the top sheet as usual, the hook should now ride up over the ramp and slip along the top.

Now take as many exposures as you want. When you're done, go back in the dark, pull the cassette out, pull out the strip of metal, and pop the cassette back in the camera. The top sheet now ejects normally, developing your multiple exposure.

Why would anybody go to all this trouble? Well, in my case I was working with a 3D ray tracing program back in the late '80s. I wanted a quick way to view the program's 24-bit output, but the company hadn't gotten any 24-bit displays yet. So I saved a separate 8-bit indexed file for each of the Red, Green, and Blue channels, hacked the color look-up tables to display linear red, green, or blue, and "photo composited" on the SX-70 by displaying each channel in turn and doing a multiple exposure.

look at
»link
under the FAQ section


2_shot and then open the film loader , during the shot, after close and then you can shot again

i prefer the first method because the 2 sometimes doesn't work for me, maybe I dodn't undertood correctly ...

hope this can help you

if you need a picture of the metal needed to close the left corner of the filmpack tell me , this is my mail
filippo@studiocentenari.it
write me and then I can send you the sample
have a nice day!



2005-09-02 // 22:07:18
Norah.Goldenbogen
this is such a fucking great project! i love it! but i don't understand how you modify your SX70 to make double exposures ...?