Lately I’ve been telling everyone I talk to about my newfound, bittersweet fascination with Polaroids. It’s like learning that a loved one has a terminal illness—you want to savor as much of your remaining time together as you can.
As I understand it, the factory production lines for Polaroid film have actually stopped; what’s left is a few months’ supply still in the distribution pipeline. So I’ve been buying up Polaroid 600 packs whenever I come across them. (The best prices I’ve found are at Office Depot online; and locally—brrrr—at Walmart.)

But to stretch those last remaining shots, what better idea than to expose each frame more than once?
Most of the peel-apart packfilm cameras allow double exposures easily; and there is a known technique to trick Spectra cameras into shooting them. But for 600 film cameras, the only method I have learned about seemed complex and inconvenient.
But today I have a nifty camera mod which permits double exposures on 600 film—an inspired idea by my friend Allison Stanley. She owns a well-used Polaroid One600 camera, which sometimes failed to eject prints correctly. Appreciating the quirky beauty of her overlapping exposures, she suggested wiring in a “kill switch” to disable the print-eject motor at will.

I thought that idea was pure genius, and immediately wanted to try it out. It turns out that there’s a slight complication: All the 600 cameras I experimented with use the feed motor to recock the shutter too. But still, after adding the switch, a workable technique for 600-film double exposures does become possible.
Opening Up the Camera
The Polaroid One Step shown here is a typical 600 film model—easy to find for a few dollars at the thrift store etc. And this gray body-style with its flip-up flash is particularly easy to open: Its plastic shell simply snaps together. Let’s look.

Start by taking the flip-up flash and holding at about a 45-degree angle as shown. At this angle, it is possible to gently flex the side ears of the flash outwards and pop them free from the the camera body.

Lay the flash back on the top of the camera, out of the way as you remove the front panel. (But try not to put too much strain on that delicate ribbon cable as you go through the following steps.)

The front of the camera simply snaps into place; carefully insert a prying tool at the points shown by my knife and the red arrow; then ease the camera faceplate free. (The shutter button parts will fall out loose, so work over a towel or a tray so nothing gets lost.)

Here’s the opened camera, with the shutter-button assembly at left and the removed front panel at right.

Locate the ribbon cable which connects to the motor at the front of the camera. The conductors I’m pointing to are the ones that provide electricity to the motor. All we need to do is to cut through one wire and route it through an external switch, and the camera’s film-eject motor can be disabled as desired.

One flaw of that gray One Step above is that its electronic flash fires with every shot. Especially for double-exposures, I preferred not to risk washed-out colors by always using flash; instead I made the kill-switch mod to a vintage “rainbow” OneStep600 instead. But its disassembly needs a few extra steps. If you want to modify one of these, see the details here, then return for the other steps below.
Make the Hack
With small scissors cut through one of the conductors of the ribbon cable (the left side gives you more length of wire to work with). Then slice the clear plastic between conductors so you can pull the free cut ends outwards.

Prepare a small switch by soldering about 3 inches of wire to it. The type of switch isn’t important; but for ease of remembering I’d suggest orienting it so the contacts close when the switch is moved towards the front of the camera.

Drill a small hole in the side of the camera, into the hollow space under the photocell assembly. Thread the switch wires through this hole. Be sure to locate the hole far enough back so that the camera’s front panel can be replaced without interfering.

You could do a neater job than I did by mounting the switch inside the camera body; but I actually preferred mounting it in a sideways orientation where it would be less likely to get snagged and flipped accidentally. I glued the switch into place with hot-melt glue, adding an extra blob on the bottom to cover and insulate the solder tabs.
Cut back any excess length of the two wires, and solder their ends to the cut motor ribbon cable. The ribbon seems to be tinned already, so I found soldering to it surprisingly easy; but you do need to avoid jiggling the wires while the molten solder cools. (Forceps, etc. could be useful here to hold wires steady.)

That’s it!
Now it’s time to put the camera’s front back on. Be sure the lighter/darker control is centered so it will engage with the internal slider properly. I think it’s easiest to reinstall the shutter button parts by tucking them into the recess on the camera’s front, then sliding all the parts back into place as a unit:

Re-attach the flash pivots (again holding it at a 45° angle) and the camera is ready to use.
Using the Modded Camera
Okay, we’ll assume you’ve wired the switch so that when flipped forwards, the contacts are closed. In this position the camera operates exactly as originally.
Keep the switch “on,” and load a fresh film pack. When you close the door, the black cover sheet should eject. (If it doesn’t, something is wrong: Re-check your work.)
Remember, after every exposure the motor needs to run sometime, to re-cock the shutter and prepare for the next shot. But the switch allows us to delay that, and not have the print spit out immediately.
So the technique for double exposures is this:
• Flip the switch backwards, and make your first exposure (shutter fires, but print does not eject). I’d suggest that you slide the lighter-darker control all the way to darker for your first tests.
• Drop the film door open; then flip the switch forward (the motor immediately runs; but the rollers are disengaged so the print stays inside the pack)

• The front edge of the print (or as shown here, two prints) is pushed out of the pack slightly. Carefully push these front edges back into the film pack, as far as you are able.

• Close the door, leave the switch forward, and make your second exposure (print ejects normally).
• A third exposure (etc.) is possible by repeating the same cycle:
Switch off/shoot/drop door/switch on/tuck print into pack/close door.
There’s a couple things to note about this method. One is that pushing the front edge of the print back into the pack in daylight can leak light into the pack: This gives the funny “row of teeth” pattern seen at the bottom of this shot:

You can minimize this, by delaying the door-drop maneuver until you can move into dim light (or, push the print edge back into the pack by feel, with a jacket etc. thrown over the camera). But I’ve actually grown rather fond of this quirk.
The other issue is a general one for double-exposures: You can only add light, not subtract it. Any brightly-lit area of your subject tends to override the image in the other exposure. It’s mainly in the darker areas of the scene where you’ll see the double-ness of the exposure. So try to include sufficient dark, blank areas in your shots. And stick to simple, bold subjects until you get the hang of how images combine.
These are strange days, when the cost of a complete Polaroid camera is trivial compared to the preciousness of each exposure. Yet the freedom to cut up and re-jigger old cameras is liberating, too. And the magical serendipity of Polaroid doubles seems like a fine way to celebrate our farewell to this unique and irreplaceable medium.
Important Update: with most 600 cameras, making double-exposures will confuse the frame counter. After making 10 exposures (not after ejecting 10 prints) the shutter button will lock.
The slightly-inconvenient cure is this: grab a spare black film-pack cover sheet and go into a dark room. Open the camera, remove the film pack entirely, and slip the black sheet back into the top of the film pack. (Orient the little dangly plastic tag towards the cut-away corner of the pack.) Close the film door, and allow the camera to spit out the black sheet again (flip on the kill-switch if needed). The frame counter will be reset and you may continue taking pictures.