certain crystals (eg. tourmaline), known as dichroic, produce two internal beams polarised at right angles to each other & in addition, strongly absorb one beam while transmitting the other, although the transmitted light is colored.
Herapth in 1852, discovered that dichroic crystals of quinine iodosulphate (herapathite) transmit a beam as plane-polarised light with transmission close to the ideal 50% for all wavelengths of visible light
Land in 1929 invented a practical method for embedding the tiny synthetic crystals of herapathite (~1011 per sq.cm) in a transparent cellulosic film 0.001-0.004“ thick in uniform alignment which acted like a single huge crystal - the Polaroid sheet, with its ability to be bonded to glass, had the advantage of large size, low cost & polarising effectiveness approaching that of the Nicol prism except at the extremities of the spectrum.
more recently, Polaroid materials have been prepared by aligning molecules (eg. polymeric iodine in polyvinyl alcohol or polyvinylene) rather than tiny crystals, which have greater stability & freedom from scattered light.
when two Polaroid light polarisers are held in the line of vision in the crossed position, no light gets through & the field of view is dark. If a crystal of quartz or a tube of sugar solution is placed between these polarisers, the light reappears as these are optically active substances and rotate the plane of polarisation.