3 Simple Ways to
Share What You Make

With Instructables you can share what you make with the world — and tap into an ever-growing community of creative experts.

PhotosPhotos

Share one or more photos of a project, recipe, or whatever you've made, quickly and easily.

Step by StepStep-By-Step

Share your step-by-step photos with text instructions of what you made so others can do it too!

VideoVideo

Share your how-to video. You'll need your embed code from a video site such as YouTube.

How to Modify a Polaroid Land Camera to Take 35mm film

How to Modify a Polaroid Land Camera to Take 35mm film
Yes you are probably wondering why I would do this, but It all started when I bought this camera off of Ebay for 20 bucks. I was buying it as a collectors item, but when I saw it i was dying to use it in some sort of way. It is too bad that polaroid stopped making the specific film for this camera around the 90s so I modified this camera to take normal 35 kodak roll film. 

I apologize if I have offended people by modifying this camera I am not trying to "Destroy history" I'm just trying to have fun with it. Thanks.
 
 
Remove these adsRemove these ads by Signing Up
 

Step 1Tools and Materials, what you will need:

Tools and Materials, what you will need:
Camera: a Polaroid land camera (mine is a model 150) 

Materials:
1 piece of leather about a 1/16''
1 sheet of sticky foam paper
1 sheet of tin foil
2 sheets of plain paper
2 decorative knobs of your choice ( to advance and rewind film)
1 dowel: 3/8
1 piece of hard wood 2x2'', 8''
Saran wrap
polymer clay
black silk fabric
white glue (Elmer's or tacky) and old brush  to apply it with
strong glue (Gorilla, Wood glue)
1 roll of film (for measuring purposes)

Tools:
sand paper
an awl (or something sharp and strong you can hit with a hammer[nail, screw])
a semi course round file
drill and pilot bits: 1/4, 3/8,  5/16,
1 small flat headed screwdriver
a fine ruler (goes up to 16th of an inch )
a squaring tool of some kind
hammer
a dremel and a bit to cut and sand metal 
safety glasses
X-acto blade 
1 sharp hand saw
air compressor or something to blow away metal shavings
Clamp

 






« Previous StepDownload PDFView All StepsNext Step »
8 comments
Jul 31, 2011. 11:55 AMgionwhorphin says:
Very cool. I have an old 800 I was thinking of using for cyanotypes, but I might try this instead. I would really love to see some examples of pictures you've taken with this rig.
Dec 26, 2010. 9:29 PMkyre says:
I'm currently doing some thing similar only going the way of 120 film and pano(ish) format :D

How do you count the frames?
Jan 6, 2011. 10:51 PMkyre says:
If this is late, you should see some of the forum replys I'we gotten :P (2 years after the original post)

Your measuring method is much the same i used for my (failed) lomolubitel 120-135 conversion.

I'm just wondering, why frame it as a normal ish 35? the lens should cover a good bit length wise on a 35mm at least 12cm on the role at a time, my lomo gave me about 6cm.
Then again i suffer form a major pano fetish ;)

-kyre
Dec 26, 2010. 12:04 PMjmsaltzman says:
Very nice conversion! I'd like to see some output though, should have some interesting optical effects with the smaller filmback.
Dec 21, 2010. 11:42 PMSeamusDubh says:
Cool.
Makes me wonder what it takes to convert one of these to digital.
Dec 20, 2010. 7:58 AMgmoon says:
Nice project. FWI, they actually used to sell 35mm adapters for 2 1/4 (70mm) roll cameras, although I've never seen one for a polaroid. The adapters were probably marketed because Kodachrome was such a big hit initially, and wasn't available in the larger format at first...

I certain used to use a polaroid back for my medium format cameras, so it's fun to see something in the opposite direction.

It will be interesting to see where the 35mm format goes in the 10-20 years, given that it's rising cost and shrinking availability means it's likely to be used mostly by artists, rather than commercial photogs or consumers...

Pro

Get More Out of Instructables

Already have an Account?

close

All Steps Viewing
View all steps of an Instructable on the same page when you're a Pro Member.

Upgrade to Pro today!
4
Followers
2
Author:Marker1024