Fall Polaroid Week Roundup | Urizen Freaza

Dear FSC friends, this is Urizen Freaza.

Roid Week was over a month ago, so this roundup is kind of coming quite late... But like with a tasteful meal, you shouldn't rush with Roid Week. Twice a year i discover new instant photographers and see what the old pals have been up to. It is a gathering, if only online, of my tribe. The people who understand why I look at an instant photo rolling out of a camera and see magic. For six days our community shows and shares.

Why is that important? Because, my friends, we instant photographers are strange. We complain and we compare what we have to something that no longer exists. We hate and we are easily outraged. Sometimes so much so that one would think the magic of the image rolling out of the camera is no longer the most important part of the whole deal. Not everyone, not all the time. And definitely... not on Roid Week!

It's important because what we perceive as materials for that magic, is what profit-driven companies call product. I'm not saying 'fortunately' or 'unfortunately', it's just so. So if there is a future for us, it will only happen if we show these companies that we are plenty.

Twice a year I see what the old pals have been up to. But more importantly, i discover new artists working on the medium. And that's future. So if this medium is important to you, share it. Share your love for it, share your work, share your knowledge. Or all three things at once.

Here's a roundup of the photos submitted to Film Shooters Collective and the ones tagged as #fscpolaroid on instagram during Roid Week. Please go check the artist's profiles, and if you like what you see, follow them and show them love. And more importantly, check the Roid Week pool on Flickr, on Twitter, and on Instagram .


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Urizen Freaza was born in Tenerife in 1982 and is since 2010 based in Berlin. He's a self-taught photographer and film-maker. Self-taught meaning that this is a path he's still walking, while hoping there is always more path to walk. He's a member of the Film Shooters Collective and part of the team behind the analogueNOW! festival in Berlin. See more of his work on his website and on Instagram.

Holga Week | Katie Mollon

Here at Film Shooters Collective, we wanted to celebrate Holga Week by having our viewers share some of their all-time favorite Holga images. We wanted to include first-time Holga shooters, so we waited for everyone to have a chance to get a roll (or several) processed.

My name has become synonymous with Holga, despite owning a variety of film cameras. There's something so versatile about this seemingly limited plastic device that has kept me coming back for over a decade. If the dreamy focus and vignetting wasn't enough of an effect, there are endless other fun tricks you can do with a Holga. From bulb-mode long exposures to exposure stacking to overlapping frames or exposing the sprockets on 35mm film, the creative options are plentiful. And don't forget: there will probably be light leaks involved!

The following set of images transitions between depictions of peace and solitude to feelings of excitement and chaos. The image makers selected films, subjects, and techniques that helped portray these themes. If anyone thought the Holga camera was a simple, one-trick pony: the contrasts in these images will convince them otherwise.


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Film photographer Katie Mollon is based in Michigan. See more of her work & connect with her on Instagram.