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  • - Hi. - Good to meet you. What's your name?

  • - Knox. - Knox.

  • Go ahead and step up to our table here.

  • So, I'm gonna put a piece of tech in front of you.

  • - Give me your thoughts... - This part smells like paint.

  • - what you think it is... - This part smells like a car.

  • what it might do.

  • Does this open?

  • - What do you think it is? - I can't really tell

  • - but, like, a printer? - Great guess.

  • - You're on the right track. - Oh.

  • You're, like, halfway there.

  • - Yeah. - Oh!

  • - Now I know what this is. It's a camera. - What is it?

  • Technically, you're right about it being a printer.

  • - ( whirring ) - It's both a camera and a printer.

  • Knox: Cool, very cool.

  • I'm Marques Brownlee and I review dope new tech.

  • But on this show, I'm rewinding the clock

  • to discover the tech of the past

  • that changed our lives forever.

  • This is "Retro Tech: Polaroid."

  • Hey, what's up, guys? MKBHD here.

  • So, the tech I'm about to look at today

  • is the oldest piece of tech I have ever unboxed.

  • The Polaroid SX-70 came out 20 years before I was even born.

  • I'm a big fan of photography already.

  • The high resolution smartphone cameras,

  • the mirrorless world, but it was this camera

  • that changed the way we think about photography forever.

  • Oh, wow.

  • Is this the retro look or what?

  • I've seen Polaroids before,

  • but I've never actually used one, shot with one.

  • So, I'm excited to see what's in the box.

  • This is a tripod mount.

  • A bracket looking thing with some pins.

  • Close-up lens.

  • Holster accessory.

  • ( sniffs )

  • I don't know what 50-year-old leather

  • is supposed to smell like.

  • This is the camera itself, and it's collapsible.

  • That's dense. That's real metal.

  • All right, so here's how to open and close it.

  • Hold it in the palm of your left hand.

  • Lift the small end of the viewfinder cap.

  • Pull straight up.

  • Why is this not opening?

  • Hold it in the palm of your left hand.

  • Oh, you really have to yank it.

  • Like, it feels like you're breaking it.

  • All right, I do have some Polaroid film.

  • Photos develop in 10 to 15 minutes.

  • Insert the film this side up.

  • Hey, there you go.

  • Big smile. Three, two, one.

  • ( clicks, whirring )

  • Okay.

  • Now I try to find the photo I just took.

  • Hmm.

  • ( clicks, whirring )

  • Okay.

  • I don't want this to be the first piece of retro tech

  • I've broken out of the box.

  • And as we know, I've had great luck

  • with fixing retro tech in the past.

  • So, this is really no problem for me at all.

  • Oh, man. This is gonna jam the same way printers jam.

  • ( whirring )

  • And there we have it.

  • Okay, so I finally figured out how to take the photo,

  • but I still have a lot to learn

  • about the history of the iconic Polaroid SX-70.

  • - First of all, thank you for joining me. - Man, thank you.

  • I'm gonna ask you first off to go ahead and check underneath your seat.

  • Check under my seat. Is this liquor?

  • This is pristine. Mine is not.

  • Polaroid is kind of similar to Apple

  • in a sense that all of their products

  • just, like, feel good in your hands.

  • It's a pleasure to touch, this leather.

  • Even after 45 years, it still feels good.

  • - There's no film. - Marques: I thought we had film left.

  • Remember when that used to happen?

  • No.

  • - No, probably not. - Yeah.

  • What was it like to take photos

  • before the Polaroid was invented?

  • Depew: So before the innovation of Polaroid,

  • photography was a much slower process.

  • Photographers would have to shoot their film, take it to a lab.

  • It was a process that would take days.

  • Wood: You know how when you pose for a photo

  • and then somebody tells you it's a video?

  • That's what taking an actual photo was like back in the day.

  • You just stand there for like an uncomfortable length of time.

  • That's why every photo from back in the day, nobody's smiling,

  • 'cause they're mad.

  • They're like, "How long is this photo gonna take?"

  • Santiago: In walks Edwin Land.

  • He was kind of a chemist more than a photographer.

  • Bonanos: He was a Harvard student when he invented the polarizing filter.

  • It's a filter that allows the amount of light getting through to be controlled.

  • So that was his first product,

  • and in fact that built the company.

  • Man: Cool-Ray Polaroid sunglasses.

  • See about them.

  • Depew: In the beginning of Land's pursuits,

  • he had no idea he would be in the camera business.

  • In 1943, he was on vacation with his family.

  • And he takes a picture of his three-year-old daughter,

  • and she says, "Dad, why can't I see this picture right now?"

  • Bonanos: The story goes that he spent the rest of the evening

  • walking around the resort and worked out the rough plan

  • for how one would make an instant camera.

  • Depew: So it was in 1943 that instant film was conceived,

  • but it took 30 years

  • for it to actually come to fruition.

  • The dream of being able to take a wallet out of my pocket,

  • and perhaps open the wallet, press a button,

  • close the wallet, and have the picture.

  • ( music playing )

  • Depew: The SX-70 was really the ultimate realization

  • of what Edwin Land had in mind

  • when he first created instant photography.

  • This camera ushered in a whole new film line

  • called an integral film.

  • So this is film that's in a sandwich.

  • The positive and negative and developing chemistry

  • live together under a Mylar sheet.

  • There are three chemical pods,

  • and these all contain a bunch of magical chemistry goo.

  • Bonanos: And the rollers shmush the chemistry

  • and they coat the layers of film inside the packet.

  • Then a number of reactions take place.

  • Depew: All these timing layers are firing at the same time.

  • Everything you would need in a traditional dark room process

  • is happening within this very thin sheet of film.

  • It cannot really be overstated

  • how much of a quantum leap this was

  • in photographic technology.

  • The very fact that you could see your image so quickly after taking it

  • was an absolutely mind-blowing thing

  • for everyone in the world.

  • All right, want to try to take a selfie with it?

  • Has anyone ever taken a selfie with a Polaroid?

  • - Probably not a very good one. - All right, let's try.

  • But I think it's worth a shot.

  • - Wait, what does that knob do? - That's exposure,

  • and I think all the way white is all the way open. I think.

  • This is gonna be a terrible photo.

  • - We'll see how it goes. - Let's just try.

  • - All right. - ( clicks, whirring )

  • Yeah, that's a terrible photo!

  • Turns out I didn't check the focus.

  • Imagine if a fourth of your iPhone memory was wasted

  • on one photo and the photo looked like this,

  • and you only got eight shots left.

  • What are the eight things you want to remember forever?

  • Marques: Even though today's digital cameras

  • are light years beyond the Polaroid SX-70,

  • many photographers still love using this camera today.

  • So we're out here in New York City.

  • I'm with Phil V., who I think--

  • would it be safe to call you the mayor

  • of instant photography in New York City?

  • You've shot Polaroids of everyone from artists to celebrities.

  • - First of all, why Polaroid? - It's a tool for communication

  • because this camera is pretty much like a conversation starter.

  • I'm looking for the best experience between me and that person.

  • That's just something that you can't get with digital photography,

  • especially on the spot, instantly.

  • I'm so used to having all the manual controls.

  • The ironic thing about control is that you literally control

  • everything that's going on with this camera.

  • This actually has, like, an exposure meter,

  • which is the black and white bar.

  • This is a glass lens, as opposed to other

  • Polaroid cameras that come with a plastic lens.

  • So with this, you can get a very extremely sharp image

  • if your exposure is right, if your lighting is right.

  • There's no room for error, but if you know what you're doing,

  • then you know you can get the perfect photo.

  • All right, so what's the plan today?

  • We got eight shots in our camera each.

  • We're gonna make every photo count,

  • and we're gonna go around shooting Polaroids

  • of people in New York City.

  • ( music playing )

  • What's up, bro? You want to take a photo?

  • You gonna take one and I take one. Same spot.

  • He is in the shadow, but you can leave the exposure

  • right in the middle since it's good lighting.

  • And also you wanna think about, like, do you want a close-up portrait?

  • A little further away to get the background?

  • I'd like to get a close-up right now.

  • So I'm gonna take a similar photo.

  • P.V.: All right, ready? Three, two.

  • ( whirring )

  • Another thing, too, it's super light sensitive.

  • So I want to keep out of, like, the sun.

  • Out of the sun, yeah. At least the first ten minutes.

  • I wanna get you to write something on it.

  • You can write anything you want.

  • So, that's actually what I do, too,

  • is I get people to write on the Polaroid

  • and it creates another story within the Polaroids.

  • Still developing. I definitely got some overexposure happening.

  • Framing and the sharpness is perfect.

  • You wanna maybe just get it a little less exposed.

  • Excuse me, bro. You got a little bit of time? We're shooting photos.

  • - All right. - Thank you.

  • So I bumped the exposure down a little bit,

  • and I feel like when I get everything developed, it'll look pretty close.

  • I can feel my photography skills getting better as we go.

  • P.V.: What's up, bro?

  • I'm gonna get you before it melts. Before it melts.

  • There we go.

  • Maybe you get a shot of these two guys. What's up, guys?

  • - So you down to take a Polaroid? - Yeah.

  • All right, thank you.

  • There's the classic New York City shot.

  • Three, two.

  • So that's seven down,

  • - one to go. - Seven down, one to go.

  • Marques: I feel like all my knowledge

  • about what I've been doing for the last couple of hours

  • should come down to this shot.

  • Amazing. Thank you.

  • So let's see what we got.

  • All right, let's check these out.

  • I like your exposure on some shots more than the exposure on mine.

  • I think my best photo might be this one here in front of the flowers.

  • I got focus right, I got exposure right,

  • and I think everything just sort of fell into place from there.

  • I think from this I learned a lot about the photography basics,

  • like you gotta frame it right. Can't change that later.

  • - You gotta nail focus. Can't change that later. - Yep.

  • When you get really good at those basics,

  • then you can take timeless photos.

  • So, did you make eight shots count?

  • I progressed enough

  • that I did make the eight shots count.

  • ( music playing )

  • Marques: While walking around New York City

  • with a Polaroid may seem retro now,

  • back in the '70s it was a huge leap in technology,

  • and Edwin Land knew he needed to help people

  • understand its capabilities.

  • Stern: Edwin Land was this showman.

  • He understood early on that you couldn't just talk

  • about this technology.

  • It was gonna be too much for people to grasp.

  • So he would demo that.

  • Depew: Land was very fond

  • of doing these corporate shareholder meetings,

  • Often in very theatrical ways.

  • He's largely accredited with creating this format

  • that Steve Jobs, Apple,

  • and now many, many other companies also use.

  • The first generation SX-70, it was expensive.

  • Wood: The old-school Polaroid with inflation

  • would've been, like, a thousand dollars today.

  • It's basically an iPhone XR--

  • I don't know the iPhone letters.

  • The film would be ridiculous, too.

  • It's like $40.

  • That's basically $4 a photo, $6 a photo.

  • Whatever it is, that's a lot.

  • Bonanos: However, it also could not be made in quantity

  • fast enough to satisfy the demand.

  • It was the hot tech item of that year.

  • By the early '80s, the basic Polaroid camera

  • was as a familiar a piece of household tech as your phone.

  • If you don't have a Polaroid Sun camera,

  • something's left out of your life.

  • Marques: So, the SX-70 was an icon,

  • but it wasn't Polaroid's only camera.

  • They had 70 years of instant camera innovation,

  • and today we're gonna check out

  • a few of their more unique designs.

  • So this is "Dope Or Nope."

  • ( whooshing ) Intro.

  • That's actually gonna be the intro now.

  • All right, so we're here with Peter McKinnon.

  • First of all, thank you for joining me today.

  • Dude, thanks for having me.

  • What's up, everybody? Today, we're talking about

  • how to make your photos look better.

  • Marques: He's a professional photographer,

  • fellow YouTube creator, and an expert

  • in getting the most out of any camera.

  • Whoo! Look at that.

  • All right, so let's get into it.

  • We first have something released in 1995.

  • This called the Polaroid 600 Talking Camera.

  • Talking camera? You know when you have

  • one of those products and you can just hear--

  • - like, listen to that. - ( crunching )

  • It's the sound of 1995.

  • So there's a speaker in the front. That's interesting.

  • Do you talk into it or does it listen?

  • Why is there a talking camera? I need to figure this out.

  • All right, this is a really interesting shutter button.

  • - I'm gonna half press to focus. - Camera: Smile real nice!

  • What?

  • I half pressed to focus and it said--

  • Camera: Smile real nice!

  • - That's amazing. - Wait, okay.

  • If I switch it to two, is it gonna say something else maybe?

  • Camera: Cheese for me! Cheese for you!

  • Everybody, cheese-a-roo!

  • Cheese for me! Cheese for you!

  • - I mean, that's smart. - Everybody, cheese-a-roo!

  • - How do you not laugh doing that? - Oh, my--

  • The record button. What does the record button do?

  • - I'm still confused by that. - Record your own sound.

  • Oh, if you can record your own--

  • - Okay, ready? - Ready?

  • ( laughs ) Smile!

  • - Here we go. The suspense is killing me. - Here we go.

  • Three, two, one.

  • Camera: ( laughs ) Smile!

  • That's amazing.

  • - That's so cool, man. - I'm so glad that worked.

  • - What are you thinking? - When I just saw the first pre-recorded ones,

  • I was, like, "Oh, this is not that--

  • but the recording your own message

  • - is what put it over the top for me. - Yeah.

  • - So, I think this is dope. - Dope for sure.

  • ( music playing )

  • Camera: ( laughs ) Smile!

  • All right, next up we have the Polaroid JobPro.

  • It came out in 1985, and I guess it was made

  • specifically for construction sites.

  • I would expect no other color scheme than that.

  • It looks like the box my drill came in.

  • I guess it's gotta be somewhat rugged.

  • I don't know if it feels any more sturdy than any other.

  • I mean, it's rectangular.

  • - Should we do a drop test? - Drop test. Wow.

  • Oh! Oh!

  • - The top closed. - Perfect.

  • I guess now I gotta take a picture, huh?

  • - Bam. - Like nothing even happened.

  • Let's drop it again.

  • I think they may have thought it's more robust

  • and it's got the construction colors,

  • but to me it's the same as any other Polaroid.

  • - I'm gonna go with nope. - That's my impression, too.

  • - Yeah. - It's nope.

  • Sorry.

  • So our next one comes at us

  • straight from 1973.

  • - Ooh. Black and white. - Pretty big box.

  • 8x10 film holder and processor.

  • Huh.

  • Ten negatives, ten positives.

  • - Four of these. - I can't imagine

  • how big a camera it would have to be

  • to shoot film this big.

  • - Ooh. It looks like an accordion. - Oh.

  • - That's the cable release for sure. - That's the trigger?

  • Oh, I've always wanted to push one of these.

  • So, the funny thing with these cameras

  • is you have to preset everything ahead of time.

  • So, it's kind of like backwards from digital.

  • So, pick a pose that you can hold,

  • 'cause when we nail focus, you can't move.

  • This is my presidential portrait.

  • Here we go. Oh, wow.

  • This is insane.

  • That is all set. Boom.

  • Oh, it's happening.

  • Drop the holster in.

  • - I have to itch my shoulder. - Don't move.

  • - ( clicks ) - I saw it click.

  • - Yeah, we did it. - I think we took a photo.

  • - Okay. - ( sighs )

  • So now we bring it over to our developing station.

  • All the chemicals are in those little packets at the bottom.

  • What does it say about the chemicals? "Don't touch anything."

  • "If you do get it on your skin, consult a doctor."

  • - We have a doctor standing by. - Of course we do.

  • ( whirring )

  • - That's it. - Let's see our masterpiece. Let's see it.

  • - Oh, there it is. - McKinnon: Bam. A little light leak.

  • There's a light right behind me when we took the photo,

  • so it's like a little flare, actually.

  • - Oh, I'm dying. - Oh, you got blue on you.

  • - ( McKinnon gasps ) - I got blue on me.

  • I can't feel my whole hand.

  • - Really? Are you serious? - Yeah. Completely numb.

  • Yeah, I'm just kidding.

  • Marques: It's higher resolution than I imagined it would be.

  • I have a brand-new appreciation for this

  • just because even though it's instant,

  • it's a lot more work than what we're used to.

  • All right, verdict. What are you thinking?

  • It's pretty dope.

  • Super dope.

  • Marques: Polaroid's innovation not only inspired

  • both amateur and professional photographers in the '70s and '80s,

  • but years later, it was the catchy lyrics of a hit song

  • that would inspire a new wave of Polaroid enthusiasts.

  • In 2003, OutKast came out with the infamous "Hey Ya!"

  • It brought so much attention to Polaroid as a company.

  • Shake it like a Polaroid picture

  • Polaroid was like, "This is great,

  • but you also shouldn't actually shake the Polaroid."

  • You should not shake it like a Polaroid picture.

  • - Don't shake it. - Don't shake it.

  • Don't shake the picture, you'll just crack it.

  • I was today years old when I found out

  • that you're not supposed to shake it

  • like a Polaroid picture.

  • But I blame Polaroid.

  • Polaroid should've said, "André 3000, shut up.

  • That's not what you're supposed to do, Mr. Benjamin."

  • Leave it, leave it, leave it

  • Leave it on the table like a Polaroid picture

  • But that's not catchy, and that wouldn't have went platinum.

  • Marques: The OutKast song "Hey Ya!" was a huge hit,

  • and despite the bad advice, Polaroid scored some major publicity.

  • But even that wouldn't be enough to protect them

  • from an oncoming digital revolution.

  • Polaroid actually did create a digital camera,

  • and they were one of the first companies

  • to actually begin to do this.

  • But, unfortunately, they were making tons of money with their Polaroid film

  • and they didn't really pursue it in the way that they should have.

  • Stern: When I think about the first digital cameras,

  • you had Sony, Cannon, all these big names.

  • Polaroid wasn't talked about.

  • When it came time for Polaroid to reinvent itself

  • for it to take itself into the future,

  • they were flat-footed.

  • Brian Williams: And now to something

  • that used to be the height of technology.

  • Polaroid as we once knew it is fading away.

  • Bonanos: It was a company

  • that was destroyed by the digital revolution.

  • Although, curiously,

  • it is having a small scale resurgence now.

  • Depew: Go on Instagram today and you'll see

  • that they have firmly adopted the square image.

  • ( whirring )

  • When you take a picture with this camera,

  • the picture that comes out is the picture you get.

  • There's a lot of happy accidents that occur.

  • There's a weird light leak or a ray of sun coming in--

  • that's now a part of your picture.

  • If you go on Instagram, you'll find a whole set of filters

  • solely dedicated to emulating the analog effects

  • that cameras like this would give you organically.

  • Marques: Today with photography,

  • we're so used to be being able to edit and manipulate

  • our photographs into whatever we want.

  • ( whirring )

  • But part of the charm of the original Polaroid is

  • what you see is what you get.

  • Or is it? To help figure that out,

  • I'm here with model, entrepreneur,

  • and fellow YouTuber Karlie Kloss.

  • My favorite feature on this phone, quite honestly, is the camera.

  • Marques: Karlie is not only one of the biggest supermodels on the planet,

  • but she's also a coder and a lover of all things tech.

  • So, first of all, I just want to know,

  • Polaroid is older than both of us.

  • Do you have any sort of experience with this sort of camera?

  • I love Polaroids.

  • I do have a lot of experience with Polaroids,

  • especially in my profession.

  • - Right. - But not necessarily manipulating it.

  • Do you know how to load a mag at all?

  • ( whirring )

  • That's the most gratifying sound.

  • It's a very satisfying feeling.

  • Marques: The SX-70 film is completely enclosed

  • to protect the complicated developing process happening inside.

  • So, to edit our Polaroid images,

  • Karlie and I will be disrupting the chemistry

  • with heat, acid, and bleach to see what kind of

  • homemade filtered looks we can achieve.

  • The first tool we're going to use is this.

  • - Very high tech. - Let's just go ahead and--

  • Yeah, well, this is all we need apparently,

  • so let's take that first photo.

  • All right, I don't know how to direct from behind the camera.

  • I'll just say three, two, one.

  • - ( clicks, whirring ) - Great direction.

  • I'm a bit of a perfectionist, so...

  • Okay, ready? Three, two.

  • ( clicks, whirring )

  • - Ta-da! - Perfect.

  • So we can use this one as a control

  • and just let it do its thing.

  • For this one, we will literally just apply heat.

  • This one was taken first,

  • but it looks like this is actually developing faster.

  • Oh, wow, that's hot.

  • Are we gonna melt our photo?

  • I think it's very possible.

  • - Okay. Oh, my gosh! - Oh.

  • Wait. Marques, your photo is not even fully developed.

  • It looks two-thirds done maybe.

  • There's definitely some scientific explanation

  • that neither one of us really understands

  • of what just happened,

  • but I definitely think

  • the heat accelerated the development

  • and the chemical reaction.

  • Basically, the development of a Polaroid is...

  • - Heat based. Huh. - Huh. That's fascinating.

  • All right, so for the next experiment

  • we have household products.

  • - Kloss: Bleach. - Marques: And lemon juice.

  • All right, well, let's go ahead and see if we can take some photos.

  • - Cool. - All right.

  • ( music playing )

  • We're gonna do two each.

  • Ta-da!

  • So, I'm gonna slice open the back,

  • and then do you want the lemon juice or the...

  • - I'll take the bleach. - Okay.

  • Spray it into a cotton ball

  • - and sort of dab around. - Ooh!

  • Marques, do you know what's gonna happen?

  • If I was guessing, lemon juice is acidic

  • and possibly damaging the photo.

  • - Kloss: There you go. - Marques: Oh, man.

  • It's so delicate.

  • I don't know what I expected to be back here, but--

  • I know! Like, little magical elves.

  • Oh, whoa. Okay.

  • - Oh, whoa. - That was super quick.

  • A little bleach goes a long way.

  • Quick reaction there.

  • Three, two, one.

  • Ta-da!

  • - Whoa. That's wild. - Cool.

  • Okay, so your bleach did have a stronger effect.

  • - 100% - Kloss: Totally.

  • You know what I wonder, if any of these started as an accident.

  • Like maybe someone spilled some bleach on a photo.

  • And was like, "You know what? I could do something with that."

  • But also, I have the control.

  • - So we can see exactly how much work we did. - Whoa!

  • This is darker and more contrasty.

  • This is lighter.

  • I think this effect is way cooler

  • than a filter you can use digitally.

  • It's cool when you think about, like, we continue to innovate in photography,

  • but yet also are so nostalgic

  • about the kind of photography that we've experienced

  • - in the past. - That came before it.

  • Awesome. Well, thank you again, Karlie,

  • - for being a part of this segment. - Thank you.

  • I feel like I've learned a lot today.

  • Really fun homemade filters.

  • - For sure. - Thank you.

  • What would you say is the legacy

  • of the Polaroid camera?

  • Stern: Edwin Land devoted his life's work

  • to making sure that people

  • could see their photos instantly.

  • I don't think that's gonna be something

  • that goes away in the tech world.

  • Depew: The instant image that Polaroid afforded

  • carries over into our daily use of smartphones.

  • In a way, every digital image is instant.

  • Polaroid was the first creator of that.

  • Bonanos: There is a particular quality of an instant photograph

  • that does not apply to any other kind of photography,

  • which is that you can take a picture of somebody

  • and then hand it to them, and it's a gift.

  • That is something that digital people

  • actually understand-- the word "share."

  • It's on your digital picture on social media. Share.

  • But that's what you're doing, you're giving it to them.

  • Wood: The fact that there's filters now

  • on all of these apps

  • that supposedly are all futuristic,

  • but the first thing you want to do is make

  • your picture look like something from the 1970s,

  • is a nod to just how meaningful of an impact Polaroid had.

  • Santiago: It's this social exchange.

  • It's this moment of taking someone's picture.

  • We watch it come to life together.

  • Polaroids were that first really intimate moment.

  • That legacy will always continue on

  • as long as photography does.

  • Marques: I think it's safe to say instant photography

  • will be around for the rest of humanity.

  • And, I mean, what could be a bigger legacy than that?

  • Edwin Land and the SX-70 were at the very bleeding edge

  • of tech at that time.

  • Every photographer you know,

  • every smartphone photo you take now,

  • the way we capture and share memories

  • will never be the same because of instant photography.

  • So, thank you, Polaroid.

  • And thanks for watching.

- Hi. - Good to meet you. What's your name?

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レトロテック:ポラロイド (RETRO TECH: POLAROID)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
動画の中の単語