I miss Polaroids. I think my first was a Swinger. “Meet the Swinger, Polaroid Swinger.” If you’re in my age-range you know the song. The memories are the borderline painful kind, they’re so good it hurts, and for the billionth time: why can’t there be time machines??
This is me biking on an island called Ile d’Yeu, off the western coast of France. I’m on the right. This was shot with my SX-70, one of my favorite polaroid cameras ever. I’m not sure of the year, but it was sometime in the early 1980’s. (More below.)
After climbing the stairs to the top of Notre Dame. God did I love Paris. (More below.)
When I taught at NYU, (early 1990’s) at the beginning of every semester I had my students take pictures of each other using my polaroid camera. By then I was using a Spectra. I did this because it was a nice ice breaker for them, and also because I can’t remember names (I had them write their names on their pictures).
After they’d take the picture they would always shake them. This was such a universal gesture it was in OutKast’s song Hey Ya, “shake it, shake it like a Polaroid Picture.” But when I asked them why they were shaking the pictures they never knew why.
For those of you who didn’t know why you shook your polaroid pictures, it used to be when the picture came out you had to wipe them down with a fixer. We shook them to make them dry faster. I loved that people continued to shake them longer after there was any need.
This is me and my mom in my apartment on 11th Street after I got home from Paris (which she and my step-father paid for). While I was gone she decorated my apartment for me as a surprise. I had recently separated from my husband and had moved into my own apartment with almost no furniture. Look at all the flowers. I learned about the joy of filling a place with flowers from her. Look at the red phone! And ashtrays! I’m an ex-smoker. (More below.)
What an awful haircut. What was I thinking? I still have the coffee table, and the vase, and that rug although it’s really seen better days, and that cow painting, which was painted by my former mother-in-law (who I adored) Jean Zaleski.
For those who aren’t your (my) age, here is the Swinger commercial circa 1966 !!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h7k2uwJmwxo
david
Well I thought Polaroids are long gone and just nostalgic. Everybody in Japan takes photo with cell phone, including me. But recently I had to take a lot of pictures with Fuji’s mini-instant camera wile we were working on Ikat cloth research project. Nice idea to use them as an icebreaker.
http://www.fujifilm.com/products/film_camera/instant/
Great pictures – Sometimes I forget how beautiful Jeanne was – great to see her at her smiling best!! You look cute too!
David, that almost made me cry! That’s Ali McGraw in the commercial!
Sayaka, I love that Fuji has an instant camera! Is it affordable?
Karen, thanks but I look terrible!! My mother does look gorgeous in that shot, I agree, thanks!
A treat! There is a home for you Stacy amongst those of us who choose to linger in the days of Polaroid when all things – if they were not instant – were just around the corner.
http://polanoid.net/cover
Update: Get your Polaroid out of the closet. The film is back as of August 21.
http://blog.urbanoutfitters.com/features/polaroid
You know, Stacy, I really enjoy this picture series.
I especially like the last one of the series, of you alone in your apartment.
It reminds me very much of the kind of photographs one used to see of female authors on the back covers of their novels 30 and 40 years ago.
I like the room, and it suggests a more sedate and cosmopolitan era than our current “Sex and the City” era.
However, it struck me that if one ran across it with no knowledge of the author, it could just as easily have been taken in the South.
So here’s my fantasy about Stacy Horn as a Southern author 30 years ago.
“This photograph was taken of Mrs. Horn recently while she was listening to Brahms in her sitting room. Mrs. Horn resides in her restored home in Charleston, South Carolina, with her thoroughbred Persian Penelope.
Mrs. Horn recently won the Daughters of the American Revolution’s prestigious prize for her best-selling novel ‘The Surf, the Old Clock, and the Bell Tower.’
Mrs. Horn is also reknowned for her prize-winning azaleas.”
The Fuji camera is available at B&H (near Penn Station)
http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/591875-REG/Fujifilm_15192559_Instax_200_Instant_Camera.html#reviews
david
I had a ZIP camera (I think that’s what it was called.) I got it for my birthday when I was 8 or 9. It was one you had to peel the stuff off the picture after you pulled it out of the camera.
Love the Notre Dame shot!
Greg, that was great.
Weston and David, thanks for those links!! Woohoo! The past returns!