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.
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Viva with electronic flash No.M1183 (1984) for Caribbean market
Integral film
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 × 77 mm) square image area and a ~4.2 × 3.5 in2 (108 × 88 mm2) 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 I-2 (2023) – one 98 mm <templatestyles src="F//styles.css" />f/8 lens with lidar autofocus; shooting modes available from the camera itself include automatic, shutter priority, aperture priority, and fully manual. (Note: lens equivalent to 38mm equivalentangle of view and <templatestyles src="F//styles.css" />f/2.8 in 35 mm film or full frame digital format.)[9][10][11][12] Additional features are available using the Polaroid smartphone app. The I-2 shoots I-Type and 600 film and with a setting change it can shoot the SX-70 film.
Polaroid OneStep
Polaroid Originals OneStep 2 (2017) – one 106 mm <templatestyles src="F//styles.css" />f/14.6 fixed-focus standard lens[13][14][15] The Polaroid Originals OneStep 2 Viewfinder has an upgraded viewfinder.
Polaroid Originals OneStep+ (2018), later just Polaroid OneStep+ – manually selectable between two <templatestyles src="F//styles.css" />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))[16][17] Discontinued with the release of the Now series in 2020.
Polaroid Now
Polaroid Now (2020) – automatically selects between two fixed-focus lenses: standard (102.35 mm) and portrait (95 mm); dedicated double exposure button[18][19]
Polaroid Now Generation 2 (2023)[20] – updated version of the first generation; production discontinued in February 2025.
Polaroid Now+ (2021) – automatically selects between two <templatestyles src="F//styles.css" />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)[23][24]
Polaroid Now+ Generation 2 (2023)[25][26] – updated version of the first generation of the plus series; production discontinued in February 2025
Polaroid Flip (2025) – features a four-lens system, autofocus, built-in battery that utilizes a USB-C for recharging, improved flash and is compatible with both i-Type and 600 film. The Flip also features a sonar autofocus system, utilizing a technology that Polaroid first adopted in 1978 with the SX-70 camera. [27]