Saturday, May 31, 2014

Expository text - How instant photographs work



It may seem magic, but it really is a simple process. What is happening inside an instant camera while you are waiting for your image to appear?

In order to understand how instant cameras work, it has to be explained how a traditional film works. Photographic film is a sheet of clear plastic coated with a series of light sensitive chemical compounds. Color photographic films are coated with three chemical compounds, each of them reacting to the three basic wavelengths of the visible spectrum, blue, green and red. When you expose the film, the sensitive grains at each layer react to light of that color, creating a chemical record of the light and color pattern. To get a picture out of that, you have to develop the film using more chemicals.


Instant photographs work almost the same way, although the basic processes take place all at once inside the plastic sheet of the film. The major difference between a common photographic film and an instant film is that the instant film includes the chemicals needed.

The instant photograph consists of several layers of chemical, stacked on top of each other. A clear plastic layer followed by an acid layer, a timing layer and an image layer. The dye developers are placed on top of a base layer colored in black. In order to initiate the developing process, a reagent layer is placed between the dye developers and the image layer. When a picture is taken, the reagent material is pushed to the side of the picture, away from the light sensitive material. A pair of rollers circulates the picture to distribute the reagent chemical evenly, to develop the picture. The light sensitive layer is then reacted to form an image, which is already fully developed underneath, but the chemical agents’ clearing up creates the illusion that it is created right in front of your eyes.

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