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Polaroid to stop producing instant film

WALTHAM, Mass., Feb. 9 (UPI) -- U.S.-based Polaroid says it will stop producing its instant photo film by next year, ending a photographic run that began in 1948.

The Waltham, Mass.-based company is closing factories in the United and overseas because of a market lost to digital cameras that fit in a pocket and don't need film or processing emulsion to produce an image, The Washington Post reported Saturday.

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Polaroid introduced the Land Camera, which used rolled film, in 1948, and switched to cartridge film in 1963 with the introduction of its 100-series camera, favored by professional photographers who shot instant test photos before committing an image to negative, the Post said.

Polaroid's most popular period dawned with the introduction of SX-70 in 1972 and the company's employment peaked in 1978.

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