This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. The specific problem is: Citation footnotes and explanatory footnotes are both using numbers; try {{efn}} instead for explanatory.(February 2024)
More information Type, Series ...
Polaroid instant film types
Type
Series
Image area
Years
Roll
40
83mm ×108mm (3+1⁄4in ×4+1⁄4in)
30, 20
64mm ×83mm (2+1⁄2in ×3+1⁄4in)
Pack
100
72mm ×95mm (2+7⁄8in ×3+3⁄4in)
80
69mm ×72mm (2+3⁄4in ×2+7⁄8in)
Integral
SX-70, 600, i-Type
78.94mm ×76.8mm (3+1⁄8in ×3in)
Spectra
90mm ×73mm (3+1⁄2in ×2+7⁄8in)
500 / Captiva
73mm ×54mm (2+7⁄8in ×2+1⁄8in)
i-Zone
24mm ×36mm (1in ×1+3⁄8in)
Go
47mm ×46mm (1+7⁄8in ×1+3⁄4in)
2023
Close
Polaroid Picture Roll Land film cameras
Polaroid Highlander Model 80A
Polaroid Land Camera model 80B
Polaroid Model 95
These cameras took Polaroid Picture Roll Land film, which was discontinued in 1992. Some of these cameras can be converted to take pack film, but others cannot.
Viva with electronic flash No.M1183 (1984) for Caribbean market
SX-70
These cameras included both folding SLRs and less expensive nonfolding models. They take the SX-70 film, a format with a ~3.1 × 3.1 in2 (77 × 77mm) square image area and a ~4.2 × 3.5 in2 (108 × 88mm2) total area,[1] and a sensitivity around ISO 160. They come with a built-in 6-volt zinc chloride "PolaPulse" battery pack,[2] replaced with a lithium-ion pack in Polaroid B.V. remakes.[3]
The 600 film have the same dimensions as that of the SX-70.[1] The sensitivity is higher at around ISO 640. It also has a battery pack, for which Polaroid has released a small radio.[4]
The i-Type is a new film format introduced by Polaroid B.V. It is Polaroid 600 film with the battery moved from the film pack and into the camera.[1] All of the following cameras include a flash.
Polaroid Originals OneStep+ (2018), later just Polaroid OneStep+ – manually selectable between two f/12 fixed-focus lenses: standard (103 mm) and portrait (89 mm); tripod socket; additional features are available via a smartphone app (remote trigger, self timer, double exposure, noise trigger, light painting, color paint and manual mode (control of aperture, shutter speed (up to 30 s long exposure and bulb), flash strength and lens))[12][13]
Polaroid Now (2020) – automatically selects between two fixed-focus lenses: standard (102.35 mm) and portrait (95 mm); dedicated double exposure button[14][15]
Polaroid Now+ (2021) – automatically selects between two f/11 fixed-focus lenses: standard (102.35 mm) and portrait (95 mm); filters; tripod socket; additional features are available via a smartphone app (e.g. double exposure, light painting, remote trigger, aperture priority/depth of field, tripod mode/long exposure; various manual controls)[17][18]