
20×24 Polaroid Camera demo at Levi’s Photo Workshop in NYC 12/4/10
Established in 1986, the NY studio has housed the 20×24 Polaroid Camera making it available to artist and photographers around the world. The camera has a long history of working with artists such as Mary Ellen Mark, Julian Schnabel, Chuck Close and William Wegman. In 2008, as Polaroid closed its factory doors, the Studio went independent saving the last rolls of 20×24 Film from extinction.
The new home base for the comeback of analog photography since March 2010, The Impossible Project is re-inventing and re-positioning analog instant photography in the modern day as the most anti-digital medium available – both celebrating and pushing beyond its limits.


Click here to RSVP with Levi’s Workshop.
20×24 Holdings to build 2 new 20×24 Cameras
Tracy Storer, founder and owner of Mammoth Camera Company says “We are very pleased at this exciting opportunity to expand the 20×24 Camera family. My experience as a camera owner and operator has allowed me to take full advantage of our manufacturing capability to make new cameras that match and even exceed the original Polaroid design. What is most exciting is participating in the renaissance of instant analog photography in a manner not seen since Polaroid’s glory days of the 70s and 80s. I look forward to seeing what a new generation of photographers will do with it.”
John Reuter agrees, “These are indeed very exciting times for proponents of instant photography. We have spent the last year rebuilding our production capability to bring 20×24 instant film back to the marketplace. Having more cameras will allow us to bring it to many more artists in multiple venues. Our friends at The Impossible Project are also moving in the direction of larger format exploration and we anticipate some very exciting collaborations in the future.”
20×24 Holdings LLC purchased all remaining 20×24 film stock and chemistry from Polaroid Corporation in 2009. They are the sole producers of instant 20×24 peel apart instant film. The 20×24 Studio in New York City offers retail rental access to the camera and films. www.20x24studio.com
Mammoth Camera Company is a manufacturer of conventional and instant large format cameras. It also runs 20×24 Studio West in San Francisco, CA and is the sole west coast distributor of 20×24 instant film. www.mammothcamera.com
The Impossible Project saved the last remaining Polaroid factory in 2008 and has continued Edwin Land’s legacy of providing instant materials for use in the original Polaroid SX-70, 600 and Spectra cameras. www.the-impossible-project.com


Jennifer Trausch featured in Le Negatif Magazine
Timothy Greenfield-Sanders and New Cultural Icons
In 2002 Hearst Magazine produced a special issue with Narciso Rodriguez, Chloe Sevigny, Mike and Doug Starn, Audra McDonald, A.M. Homes, Rocco DiSpirito, Karim Rashid, and Babel Gilberto. Timothy Greenfield-Sanders chose to use the Polaroid 20×24 Camera for the occassion.
