Back when I'd ordered those lenses, I also picked up a package of Polaroid film for that relic that'd been sitting on a shelf for the last decade. At $23.50 (plus shipping) for an 8-shot, it's kind of like shooting with a non-renewable resource. Like a fossil fuel. It's like taking a picture with the last barrel of crude oil on earth. And while I can (and, believe me, I have) rattle off shot after shot of the kids playing in the dirt, and then delete them all for lack of clarity or focus or proper light, for just under $3 a pic, I'm pretty much locked into the deal. And, just like my usual pre-cutting paralysis at the beginning of a sewing project, I let the unopened package of film languish on the shelf right above the one I reach for every day to grab the Nikon. But the film itself is flawed, revealing a dark column staining the right side of each shot. And rather than being pissed that my money didn't buy the finest in reproduction film, I'm rather relieved that every picture already starts from an imperfect base.