I really wanted this camera to be good and restore my faith in Polaroid :(
@kukp9603 ай бұрын
Better buy refurbished SX 70!
@richardft21247 ай бұрын
I have the I 2. Outside a minus (-) correction of either 2/3 or 1 stop works well. If you think the overexposure was 3 stops then the correction dial is not calibrated the way you assume it is. -1 does not mean -1 stop. This gives great latitude in overall control. Anyway, my results are consistently good whether I use a correction outdoors or my sekonic 308S-U and meter on manual mode. I have done direct comparisons with my Instantkon rf 70 that uses instax wide film and the primary difference is in developing time, not the vibrance or accuracy of the colors. If that was not the case a few years ago, it means that Polaroid has done a good job of improving their film. You guys should listen to all the newer youtube videos and do a new round of testing. You’ll have a lot more fun when your results are much better. The experience of shooting instant film with a camera that can be manually controlled, is unsurpassed.
@gottanikoncamera9 ай бұрын
Having owned my I-2 for a couple of months, and talking to a lot of other owners, it’s best to shoot -2/3 in daylight. The exposure meter seems to work okay w/o exp comp in darker environments. My first I-2 overexposed by three stops; pretty sure it was stuck on the SX-70 film setting (ISO 160) even though I made sure to set film type, so I exchanged it. So make sure you’ve got your camera set for the right film: SX-70, 600 or I-Type, when you load it.
@safelightberlin9 ай бұрын
Unfortunately the camera was set correctly so we are not sure what is the real issue here, us not being able to understand properly how to use it or simply the camera not being so reliable as it should be
@bebra29 ай бұрын
If you choose aperture or shutter speed priority, the camera tells you whether the shoot will be over or unter exposed, inviting you to change the f-stop or the equivalent speed. Very easy, read the manual. The camera is amazing if you read the user manual.
@gottanikoncamera9 ай бұрын
@@bebra2 I always read the manual first. I’ve read the I-2 manual several times. Doesn’t help. It overexposes ⅔ stops in bright daylight.
@sirmarlondenon24978 ай бұрын
After much research, shooting -2/3 exposure eliminated my shots being over exposed and I haven't had the problem since.@@gottanikoncamera
@lofianddiy8 ай бұрын
I think it would have helped this review if you had gotten to know the camera a bit before filming(read the manual, etc.) . I know that it is the trend to unbox and dive in, but then you get these results.
@austinfassino7 ай бұрын
reading the manual won't change the ridiculous €700 price tag
@lofianddiy7 ай бұрын
That is absolutely, undeniably true. @@austinfassino
@Cosyboit9 ай бұрын
Great video guys! I didn’t know that this camera was 700 euros. Even if they fix the imperfections, I wouldn’t waste my time on buying one. I’d buy an older one. You could buy multiple Polaroids instead of this! Anyway I like how you guys went in depth and tried everything you could to get the best images.
@Ni5ei3 ай бұрын
1 Buy an SX-70 Sonar. 2 Have it overhauled and converted with an SX-70 R circuit board. You end up with an SLR(!) that gives you complete control, has BT connectivity, external flash sync, works with both 70 and 600 film and more features. All for around the same price or even cheaper than the I-2. I'd rather see Polaroid spend their time on improving their film instead of cameras.
@tvcowboys9 ай бұрын
Thanks for testing!
@PoeInTheDitch9 ай бұрын
If there's one consistent thing about modern Polaroid, it's constant disappointment.
@ianbakke5 ай бұрын
At least the film is good, as long as you’re using a decent camera, such as an SX-70 or SLR 680.
@PoeInTheDitch5 ай бұрын
@ianbakke I've got to disagree, there. I've shot Impossible/Polaroid Original film on an SX-70, SX-70 (sonar autofocus), SLR680, a Pronto Land Camera..even a Spectra. I've shot the film from the Impossible Project Era, Polaroid Orginals, and now just Polaroid. I also spent decades with the real, OG Polaroid film through the 80's and 90's. Thats how I can tell you that the film produced by this company for a decade is nowhere close to the film produced 20-30 years ago. I'm ashamed to admit, I've spent several hundred dollars supporting Impossible/new Polaroid for almost a decade. Waiting hopefully for improvements in the terrible quality, the rampant chemical spreading issues, the awful dev times and sensitivity, the fact that the pack holds 8 shots instead of 10, the utter non-reliability, etc. The company has not improved a single thing. At least not up until last year when I gave up. They bought Polaroid...not just the name, but all the patents...years ago. All the excuses of "well, we're working from reverse-engineering the tech" hasn't been a viable excuse for years. They now know exactly how the OG film was produced, but they've done nothing with that knowledge. Instead, they spend their R&D on changing the frame colors every few months, selling cheap Bluetooth speakers, and making some of the worst Polaroid-branded cameras ever made. When all anyone has ever wanted was the old film quality back.
@royayersrules4 ай бұрын
@@ianbakke Not as good as the first Polaroid. Not as good as Fuji.
@CorvusHyperion9 ай бұрын
I get great results but the camera definitely needs to be set at -2/3 EV most of the time outdoors. Not sure why Polaroid cannot get this right.
@stevenfoon21948 ай бұрын
Thank you for the information. I was considering the camera with the hopes that Polaroid fixed the issues with the consistency of their film. Sadly, they have yet to figure out the chemistry. To me the biggest disappointment was that Polaroid sued Fujifilm when the square format was released. The dream was that perhaps these two can come together and produce a whole line of film that will support the SX-70 in all its variant. Polaroid.... spend the time working on improving the film!!!!!
@ianbakke5 ай бұрын
The film is good and consistent, the issue is the crappy cameras they’re making. I can take consistently good pictures with my SX-70s and my SLR 680. Also Polaroid and Fujifilm will not come together, the film works in completely different ways between the two, the chemistry is so wildly different.
@GabrieleLopez6 ай бұрын
Thanks for a honest review. There's no need for all these control with Polaroid until they don't take the time to set these better. A simpler model just gets the job done.
@jameslenney3 ай бұрын
This is super interesting. Not sure I understand why you are saying it's 'inconsistent', though - it seems to be consistently over-exposing when relying on the light meter. For manual it looks like it's ok if you're metering separately.
@spadelump8 ай бұрын
Why I use instax pro cameras. So much better. And consistent quality
@ashparker4447 ай бұрын
Is the camera set for the right film type? It could be in SX-70 mode causing the over exposure. Or maybe you just have to use a hand held meter.
@WhoIsSerafin9 ай бұрын
Very confusing, some reviews clearly show great results and then these terrible results. Quality control of the cameras?
@mikebell19808 ай бұрын
Maybe the ability of the photographer?
@refard58 ай бұрын
it's a mix between people not used to instant film and quality control of the cameras
@pedronunes64018 ай бұрын
did you cuys check if the camera was set to sx70 film? if only automatic shots come out over exposed that would explain it
@nicholaspitt87 ай бұрын
How do you set what film is in the camera? I can't find a how to anywhere. Nothing obvious in the app or on the camera.
@genernator8 ай бұрын
The perfect camera for people who hate money
@vekofoto8 ай бұрын
Thanks for an honest review!
@royayersrules4 ай бұрын
Instant cameras (not instant film) were originally invented for family snaps, not for camera and film experts. They should produce good results at the press of a button. No light shielding, minimum development time, true colours and longevity. Don't ya think?!
@GonzoTheRosarian4 күн бұрын
I will stick with my Mint SX 70.
@ab85main737 ай бұрын
Thank you for your honesty
@ezpoppy558 ай бұрын
I’m sorry your experience was such a failure - but this is NOT an in-depth review. An in-depth review involves far more than a handful of photographs shot over a couple of sessions. I’ve had my I-2 for a few weeks and can attest to much better and consistent results than these two gentlemen. My conclusion: this camera is not for the Polaroid dilettante or casual user. It is for a serious photographer who is willing to investigate the camera and films, both of which have quirks and features. (I shoot Leica, Mamiya, Toyo LF, and Canon dSLR.) I love the way this camera and film transform “reality” into something different - photographs that are beyond merely faithful reproduction. If you can accept serendipity and trust the results to be unique, you too may find this little camera to be all I have found it (and in comparison with other high end gear, $600 for all it offers is a modest price). Happy shooting always!
@michaeltuffin81478 ай бұрын
You sound like a paid Polaroid shill.
@ezpoppy558 ай бұрын
@@michaeltuffin8147 😆
@jayallan-eq4tq7 ай бұрын
ezpoppy is speaking the truth. Just like the SX-70, you'll need to get used to shooting instant film.
@Bogaloo12326 ай бұрын
@@michaeltuffin8147 There are lots of Polaroid shills around with the I-2, seems like 90% of the reviews only talk positives about it (without even addressing the obvious design problems). I guess they poured the money into the advertising and fake reviewing of the camera and not into troubleshooting the design of it before mass production. Either this guy is a shill or he just doesn't want to accept that he got scammed with a 800USD crappy camera. The SX-70 is 50 years old and even then it's better designed than the I-2. At least it accomplishes what it's supposed to do.
@jacobyoung46579 ай бұрын
Honestly at this price id rather have a nons sl660 its a instax square SLR camera.
@bebra29 ай бұрын
Did you guys read the user manual? Cheers 🍻
@safelightberlin9 ай бұрын
No, unfortunately we toss it before being able to read it