I built a fully manual Polaroid studio camera (2024)

I built a fully manual Polaroid studio camera (1)

It turns out that shooting Polaroids in the studio isn’t impossible — it just takes a little bit of engineering and ingenuity. Here’s how I turned a $200 toy into a studio camera.

I’ve done a lot of portraiture in my time (ahem), and I’ve never shied away from building my own photography equipment. I’m also intrigued by the tactile nature of instant photography. There’s something about the ability to immediately destroy a negative that makes portraiture a lot more fun. And with Polaroids, you can give your models the photos before they’ve even developed. Nobody has to see the photo except them — and then they can share it from there… If they wish.

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I know that consistent light sources (like video lights) would have been easier to use with a Polaroid camera, but I’m a competent studio photographer, damn it, and there’s something about the vast light output from a set of studio strobes that really appeals to me. So I experimented. I used gaffer’s tape to tape a slave sensor to a Polaroid camera, hooked that up to a radio trigger, and went to town. That… Sort of worked, but not being able to control the shutter speed or aperture meant that using studio strobes was hard. It became a lot of guesswork.

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Picking a camera

There are plenty of large-format cameras that can shoot with Polaroid backs, but the old film typically used in these cameras is getting exceedingly rare and expensive. Not to mention that I don’t have any medium-format cameras at the moment, and I wasn’t particularly keen on spending several hundred dollars on acquiring one of those, too.

I wanted to use something cheaper.

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Most of the current-generation Polaroid cameras are little more than toys, without much in the way of manual control. But there is an exception.

ThePolaroid Originals OneStep+is a strange and unassuming beast, with a Bluetooth connection. Which makes no sense, let’s face it. With one tiny exception: Some wonderful soul at Polaroid Originals decided to give you access to the aperture, shutter speed, and flash output settings.

Combine that with the fact that the ISO of the film is known (typically ISO 600), and you’re suddenly fully in control of the camera itself — not bad fora $140 toy camera.

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That takes care of part of the problem. The next challenge: How do we get the camera to trigger the studio strobes?

Getting the flash to play nice

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Plan A: Wire in a PC Sync socket or hot shoe.I took apart one of the cameras in order to see if I could wire a PC sync socket directly to the circuit board. In the process, I electrocuted myself something awful (it turns out that the capacitors that drive flashes are nothing to joke about), and there was no obvious way to wire in a sync socket. I also had to take the camera apart in a way that made me less than convinced that I’d be able to put it back together again and still have it work properly.

Plan B: Use a slave flash trigger.With my fingers still emitting wafts of smoke from the failedPlan Aexperiment, I decided that perhaps taking the whole camera apart was less than prudent, so I went back to my prototype: Using a cheapslave flash trigger. This is a device that looks for a blink of light, and when it sees it, it triggers the flash. My idea was to, instead of a flash, use aradio triggerin the hotshoe, and use that to trigger my studio strobes.

There were a couple of problems with this: The flash on these cameras is mounted oddly, and if you do find a way of mounting the optical slave trigger, it gets in the way of the shutter button.

Luckily, I have access to a machine shop…

Building a slave flash assembly

One of the perks ofmy workis that I have access to a lot of toys in the workshop, including a number of 3D printers. But why go the easy route of Cad + 3D printing when you have over-engineer the hell out of a solution with a mill and a lathe?

So, of course, I decided to build my own piece out of aluminum.

Step 1: Add a tripod mount

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I found a1/4–20 Allen bolt, which is the standard tripod thread. I drilled a hole in a piece of aluminum, counter-sunk it to the right depth, and affixed my slave strobe to the block of aluminum. Step 1: Complete.

Step 2: Add a button pass-through

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Given that I was mounting the block of aluminum in front of the shutter button, I decided to just extend it through the block. I turned a length of aluminum on the lathe and counter-sunk that too. The idea was that once the block of aluminum is installed, the button extension wouldn’t be able to fall out. I was particularly pleased by how good the fit of the extension was: The shaft is 0.03mm smaller than the hole it runs through; a perfectly smooth action, with no wiggle. That sort of tolerance was completely unnecessary for this project, of course, but fun nonetheless.

Step 3: Mount it

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I built a fully manual Polaroid studio camera (10)
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I also realized that the little round thing underneath the + button is an IR light emitter. I have no idea what it does — presumably a distance meter of sorts that would help the camera determine flash output. Anyway, it was triggering the slave flash, so I taped that off, too.

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And here’s the final flash cube mounted fully. Yes, I know that the slave flash is mounted ‘backward’, but the radio triggers don’t care which way they are oriented, and I’m going to be using this camera exclusively in the studio, so it doesn’t really matter that I can’t use other external strobes.

Does it work?

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Yes. Beautifully.

I set up my strobes and set my digital camera to the same settings as I’ve dialed in in the Polaroid app — 1/60 seconds at f/22, ISO 640. From there, I set the strobes to fully manual control, and I can get all the lights set up just so. Yes,using a $3,000 digital camera as a light meterand strobe preview isslightlyoverkill, but it made sense to use what I had at hand.

Once I had everything perfectly set up to my liking on my digital camera, I put the radio trigger onto the Polaroid camera instead and shot a couple of test shots.

In theory, the Polaroids should have look similar to the digital shots. In practice, I usually had to adjust the strobes a fair bit. At $2 per photo for polaroid film, I wanted to use my regular camera to get the lights dialed in properly, rather than having to do all the experimentation when every exposure costs money.

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My finding was that the Polaroid camera isn’t as accurate on the aperture as it claims to be — I wasn’t able to determine whether it was thisparticularcamera that was a bit flakey, but I suspect it’s just the nature of these cameras. I wasn’t going to let that bother me; they’re still polaroids, and a little bit of variation is all good.

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About the Author

Haje Jan Kamps is a Dutch photographer, author, inventor, and the CEO of virtual conference platform Konf. You’ll find his photographic work on Instagram, his articles on Medium, and lots more on his website. You can also sign up for his free photo school over at Photocritic. This article was also published here and shared with permission.

As an expert in photography and studio equipment, I can provide information related to the concepts mentioned in this article. The article discusses the process of turning a Polaroid camera into a studio camera by using engineering and ingenuity. It describes the author's experience of using a Polaroid Originals OneStep+ camera and modifying it to work with studio strobes.

Polaroid Originals OneStep+ Camera

The Polaroid Originals OneStep+ camera is a unique camera that offers manual control over aperture, shutter speed, and flash output settings. This camera also has a Bluetooth connection, which allows for additional control and features.

Studio Strobes

Studio strobes are powerful artificial lights used in professional photography studios. They provide a consistent and high-output light source, which is desirable for studio photography. The author of the article wanted to use studio strobes with the Polaroid camera to achieve the desired lighting effect.

Slave Flash Trigger

A slave flash trigger is a device that detects a flash of light and triggers another flash. In the article, the author used a slave flash trigger in combination with a radio trigger to synchronize the studio strobes with the Polaroid camera. This setup allowed the author to control the studio strobes remotely using the Polaroid camera.

Building a Slave Flash Assembly

The author describes building a custom slave flash assembly using a piece of aluminum. The assembly includes a tripod mount and a button pass-through to allow access to the shutter button of the Polaroid camera. The author used a machine shop and various tools to create this custom piece.

Testing and Adjustments

After setting up the studio strobes and dialing in the desired settings on a digital camera, the author used the radio trigger and the modified Polaroid camera to take test shots. The author found that the aperture accuracy of the Polaroid camera was not as precise as expected but considered the variations acceptable for the Polaroid aesthetic.

In conclusion, the article demonstrates how the author modified a Polaroid Originals OneStep+ camera to work with studio strobes by using a slave flash trigger and a custom-built flash assembly. This allowed the author to have more control over the lighting in their studio photography.

I built a fully manual Polaroid studio camera (2024)

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