File consists of colour prints featuring images of employees demonstrating the Kodak Create-a-Print system, a self-operated enlargement centre for 35 mm negatives, located at the building 4 Image Centre
File contains a panoramic mountain view. Enclosed with the print is a caption that reads: "A panoramic vista snapped with the new Kodak Stretch 35 camera. A great travelling companion!" The Stretch 35 was a 35 mm single-use camera loaded with 12 frames of Kodacolor Gold 200. It was manufactured during 1989.
Commerical photographs: one still life of a tea set, one advertising a fisher price camera for children - the image is of three children (two boys and a girl) and a note with the photograph reads "Put a camera in the hands of children and sharpen your own view of the world. The Fisher-Price camera was designed for younsters in the five-to-eight-year-old group". Four are head shots of a young man wth a mohawk. Two are of Grey Line red double decker buses with Kodak advertising on the side of the buses. Two are studio shots of Kodak cameras with boxes of Kodak film. One is of men in the middle of a soccer game, this photograph includes a note that reads "Participants in the 1986 Kodak 'Run for the Money' color reporduction contest will be working from this colorful sports action photo in their attempts to accurately reproduce the image for the ninth annual Kodak 'Run for the Money." Other images are still lifes of coloured umbrellas, chalk, and casino lights taken at night. As well as two commercial 'beauty' shots of two women.
File contains two identical photographs featuring an image of a group of employees standing with a Canada flag outside in the parking lot of Building #5. A flag in the foreground indicates the 125th Anniversary of the Confederation of Canada. The third photograph features an image of the Kodak PhotoCD compact disc with PhotoCD Player and remote, likely taken for advertising purposes.
Item is a black-and-white digital output print of a roll of Kodak TRI-X Pan Film and a glass bottle painted with "Canadian Kodak Co., Limited, Toronto, Canada."
Item is a copy print that is accompanied by the following description: "Workers in the early 1900s assembling the Number 4A Folding Kodak camera, considered to be the ancestor of all modern folding roll cameras."
Item is a print featuring an image with the caption: The first Kodak camera, introduced in 1888, sold for $25, loaded with enough Eastman film for 100 exposures. It produced a 2 1/2 inch diameter negative.
Item is a print with the caption: Workers in the early 1900s assembling the Number 4A folding Kodak camera, considered to be the ancestor of all modern folding roll cameras.
Item is a copy print with the caption: This 1890 picture of George Eastman aboard the Gallia, does what snapshots do best. It provides a candid record, one in which people are without artifice and affect.
Item is a copy print featuring an image with the caption: "This is an artist's depiction of the Edison Kinetoscope parlour which opened April 14, 1894 at 115 Broadway in New York City." I-88-1454
File contains negatives featuring images of Kodak x-ray equipment and demonstrations of its use. There are examples including an x-ray image of a bell, a man at a monitor examining a human torso x-ray, men standing in a room equipped to take x-rays, and a woman preparing to be x-rayed and lying in an x-ray machine. Additionally, there is an image of an older Kodak building, of a box of one dozen Eastman Dupli-tized X-ray Films, and of a laboratory next to a window.
Item is a collapsible print making system for amateur use. Designed to concentrate daylight to make 5" x 7" prints from 2.25 x 3.25" negatives. Original packaging and users guide is included.
Item is a printed transparency, produced by Eastman Kodak Company in 1968, designed to assist in the production of contact reproductions of lines and halftone negatives or positives. In printed envelope with accompanying instructions.
Item is a Kodak T-14 control scale reference strip, produced by Eastman Kodak Comapny, designed to help calculate and monitor the exposing and processing of photographs. In printed envelope.
Item is a transparent sheet printed with an Eastman Kodak Gammeter, a set of indexed graph lines. Gammeters were designed to aid in the dye transfer process by allowing the easy calculation of gammas (colour contrasts) from plotted curves.
Item is a camera for making enlargements up to 16.5 x 21.6 cm (6.5 x 8.5 inches), using daylight. The product was marketed to amateur photographers as there was no need for a darkroom setup to produce the images. The No. 1 Enlarging Camera sold for $15.00 in 1904.
Item consists of two, sealed cans of Kodak Taning Developer B (powder). FOr use with Kodak Matris, Pan Matrix and Flexichrome stripping films. Each can of powder concentrate makes 3.8 liters of solution.
Item is a brown glass bottle formally containing five pounds of acetic acid for photographic development. Manufactured by the Canadian Kodak Company, Ltd.
Item is a clear glass tray for developing photographic prints. A removable glass dowel holds the paper down so it remains inmmersed in the chemical solutions. Sold by the E. & H.T. Anthony company in New York.
Item is a 48 gallon copper kettle with a silver-plated liner. It was installed in building #3 of the Kodak Heights plant in 1915 for making photographic emulsion for black and white paper and was used until 1974. The kettle was used to make the first photographic emulsion produced in Canada and was referred to as the "making kettle".
Item is a glass tube with a scale etched on the outside, used in chemical analysis. This object was used in the Kodak Canada plant to determine the strength of silver halide solutions in photographic chemistry. It was last used in the Kodak plant on November 1st, 1967.
Ceramic trays for processing photographic materials sizes 4 x 5 inches, there are two imprinted stamps on the side, "Canadian Kodak Co Ltd." and "4 x 5", the bottom of the trays are imprinted with "Made in Austria".
Metal film and plate developing hanger, size 5 x 7 in. with the inscriptions: "patented in U.S.A. March 5 1912, Dec. 21, 1920, Nov. 29 1921. No. I.583.708"
Item is a wood trimming board manufactured in the early twentieth century by the Canadian Kodak Company, Ltd. in Toronto, Canada. Includes a ruler measured to 5 inches.
A wood trimming board manufactured in the early twentieth century by the Canadian Kodak Company, Ltd. in Toronto, Canada. The No. 1 size includes a ruler measured to 5 inches.
Item is a sealed package of twelve 5 x 7 sheets of Kodak Velox E2 single weight sensitized photographic paper, produced ca. 1943 by Canadian Kodak Co., Limited. Item is stamped with the expiry date Oct. 1, 1943.
Item consists of a 2MB Kodak Picture Card. It could be used to store and share digital pictures. Works with standard CompactFlash ATA compatible digital cameras. In original packaging.
Item consists of an unopened 15 sheet pack of 8 1/2 x 11 inch Kodak Inkjet Photo Transparency Film. It could be used to print transparencies, such as overhead presentations,with an inkjet printer.
Item consists of an unopened 15 sheet pack of 8 1/2 x 11 inch Kodak Inkjet Photo Paper, 117 lb. It could be used to print photographs with an inkjet printer.
Item consists of a sleeve for two dozen 3 1/2 x 3 1/2 inch Eastman Kodak Co. Solio Paper for export. A sticker on the front of the envelope reads "Cochran / Photo Supplies. / Hamilton, Ont." and stamped on the verso (extremely faded) reads: "This paper will not be [illegible] for / any fault of manufacture after / APR 27 1900 / EMULSION NO. 18758 / PACKED BY NO. 26".
File contains 3 colour-printed empty cardboard boxes, in two different sizes, for Kodak Velox F2 single weight photographic paper. The two smaller boxes are stamped with the expiry dates July 1, 1956 and Aug 1, 1962, respectively.
Item consists of an 8 exposure roll of Kodacolor II Color Negative Film for Color Prints C828 in original packaging. Develop before date is January 1977.
Item consists of two 22 exposure rolls of Kodak Verichrome Pan Film for Black-and-White Prints ASA 125 in original packaging. Develop before date is October 1976.
Item consists of a 8, 12, or 16 exposure roll of Daylight (ASA 80) Kodacolor II Color Negative Film C616 in original packaging. Develop before date is March 1977.
Item consists of a 36 exposure rolls of 35 mm Kodachrome Professional Color Reversal 200 Film in original packaging. Develop before date is October 1988.
Item consists of an 8, 12 or 16 exposure roll of Kodak Verichrome Pan Film for Black-and-White Prints ASA 125 in original packaging. Develop before date is indicipherable.
Item consists of an 8, 10, 12 or 16 exposure roll of Pantomic-X Professional Film Fine Grain Black-and-White Film FXP 120 in original packaging. Develop before date is June 1979.
Item consists of a 20 exposure roll of Kodachrome 64 Color Film for Color Slides KR 126-20P in original packaging. Develop before date is January 1987.
Item consists of a 12 exposure roll of 35 mm Kodak Gold Plus 100 film for color prints in original packaging. Features a sponsorship symbol for the Victoria 1994 Commonwealth Games.
Item consists of a 36 exposure roll of 35 mm Portra Natural Color 160 NC Color Negative Film in original packaging. Develop before date is January 2000.
Item consists of a 36 exposure roll of 35 mm Ektachrome Lumiere 100X Professional Color Reversal Film in original packaging. Develop before date is June 1997.
Item consists of a 12 exposure roll of Kodacolor Gold 200 35 mm film, the "Official Film of the 1988 Olympic Games" in original packaging. Develop before date is March 1990.
Item consists of a 24 exposure roll of 35 mm Kodachrome 200 High Speed Film for Color Slides in original packaging. Develop before date is February 1995.
Item consists of a 19 exposure roll of Ektachrome-X Daylight or Blue Flash Ex 160 Colour Film for Colour Slides in original packaging. Develop before date is July 1976. Price sticker reads: "Toronto/ Camera / $1.79 each".
Item consists of a 20 exposure roll of Kodachrome 64 Color Film for Color Slides KR 110-20P in original packaging. Develop before date is February 1979.
Item consists of a 24 exposure roll of Kodacolor II Color Negative Film for Color Prints ISO 100 in original packaging. Develop before date is August 1985.
Item consists of a pro pack meant to contain four 36 exposure rolls of ASA 64 Daylight Kodak Ektachrome Professional Film for color transparencies in original packaging. Develop before date is August 1981.
Item consists of a pro pack meant to contain four 36 exposure rolls of ASA 160 Tungsten Kodak Ektachrome Professional Film for color transparencies in original packaging. Develop before date is August 1981.