![]() Land further developed and produced the sheet polarizers under the Polaroid trademark. The company was renamed the Polaroid Corporation in 1937. After a few early successes developing polarizing filters for sunglasses and photographic filters, Land obtained funding from a series of Wall Street investors for further expansion. Wheelwright came from a family of financial means and agreed to fund the company. In 1932, he established the Land-Wheelwright Laboratories together with his Harvard physics professor, George Wheelwright III, to commercialize his polarizing technology. She would then write up the homework and hand it in so that he could receive credit and not fail the course. Often his wife would extract from him the answers to homework problems, at the prodding of his instructor. According to biographer Peter Wensberg, once Land could see the solution to a problem in his head, he lost all motivation to write it down or prove his vision to others. Land especially when he set up visiting posts to Harvard and Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Despite not receiving a college degree, he was still referred to from many as Dr. Land returned to Harvard University after developing the polarizing film, but he did not finish his studies or receive a degree. His breakthrough came when he realized that, instead of attempting to grow a large single crystal of a polarizing substance, he could manufacture a film with millions of micron-sized polarizing crystals that were coaxed into perfect alignment with each other. ![]() : 75 He also availed himself of the New York Public Library to scour the scientific literature for prior work on polarizing substances. He was not associated with an educational institution and lacked the tools of a proper laboratory, making this a difficult endeavor, so he would sneak into a laboratory at Columbia University late at night to use their equipment. There he invented the first inexpensive filters capable of polarizing light, which he called Polaroid film. He studied physics at Harvard University, more specifically, optics, but left after his freshman year, moving to New York City. The library there was posthumously named for him, having been funded by grants from his family. Land attended the Norwich Free Academy at Norwich, Connecticut, a semi-private high school, and graduated in the class of 1927 with honors. "nothing or nobody could stop me from carrying through the execution of an experiment" He had an elder sister named Helen who had a difficult time pronouncing Edwin's name, so she called him "Din" a nickname that stuck throughout the rest of his childhood and was used among his closest friends. : 14 He was scolded by his father when taking apart a phonograph and he vowed that Growing up, he was known to take apart household appliances, such as a mantel clock and the family's new gramophone, as well as blowing all the house's fuses when he was six years old. His Polaroid instant camera went on sale in late 1948 and made it possible for a picture to be taken and developed in 60 seconds or less.Įdwin Land was born to Jewish parents in Bridgeport, Connecticut, to Matie ( née Goldfaden) and Harry Land, a Russian scrap-metal dealer. ![]() He invented inexpensive filters for polarizing light, a practical system of in-camera instant photography, and the retinex theory of color vision, among other things. Edwin Herbert Land, ForMemRS, FRPS, Hon.MRI (May 7, 1909 – March 1, 1991) was a Russian-American scientist and inventor, best known as the co-founder of the Polaroid Corporation. ![]()
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