File contains photographs and contact sheets for the Kodak advertisement to be featured at the Hockey Hall of Fame Induction Dinner. Location - TableTop Photography
File contains prints featuring images of buildings, factories, dining halls, people and plaques related to the Canadian Kodak Co., Ltd. during the war.
File contains photographs featuring images of Black Creek Pioneer Village taken in 1966. Subjects of interest include a spinning wheel and general store.
File contains prints featuring images of advertisements for Kodak instant cameras, including a diagram of the process fluid, and Kodamatic instant color film. Also included are promotional images of Kodacolor film. Many are filed with captions. The caption for an image advertising Kodamatic Trimprint instant color film reads: "A cold winter's day is an ideal time to organize your pictures into albums. Remember that the Kodamatic Trimprints, when they have been separated from their backing, can be mounted or trimmed like conventional prints."
File contains prints featuring promotional images of Kodak instant cameras, such as the Kodamatic and the Kodak Trimprint, as well as various Kodak instant films.
Item is a copy print with the caption: The instant success of the "The Jazz Singer" in 1927 changes the movie industry forever. Once the public had a taste of "talkies" the era of silent movies came to an immediate conclusion. I-88-1454
Item is a copy print with the caption: A 1916 crew films actress Dorothy Gish. The director, center, is Elmer Clifton. The assistant cameraman, right is Karl Brown. Eight years later, Brown photographed "The Covered Wagon," the prototype of the "Hollywood western." I-88-1454
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 copy prints featuring images of a laboratory. Caption adhered to versos reads: "In 1912, George Eastman was one of the first American industrialists to organize a research laboratory. This picture was taken at kodak research laboratories in Rochester, New York, in 1920." I-88-1454
File contains copy prints featuring an image of George Eastman and Thomas Edison. Caption adhered to versos read: "George Eastman, (left) and friend Thomas Alva Edison, early collaborators. Edison purchased one of Eastman's first "snapshot" cameras. The continuous roll of film it held became the basis for Edison's invention of his first motion picture camera."
File contains copy prints of a portrait of George Eastman. Caption on verso reads: "George Eastman, founder of Eastman Kodak Company, at age 36, held several patents on inventions that transformed photography into an amateur hobby."
File contains copy prints of a portrait of George Eastman. Caption adhered to verso reads: "This portrait of George Eastman, whose inventions made photography a worldwide business, was taken by Nadar, a portrait photographer and Eastman Kodak Company dealer in Paris."
File contains prints featuring an image of the Eastman Dry Plate and Film Company Photographic Materials building. Caption adhered to verso reads: "When amateur photographers sent their Kodak cameras with exposed film inside to the Eastman Dry Plate and Film Company in 1889, they received a reloaded camera and 2 1/2 inch diameter prints. This photograph of the company was taken with an early Kodak camera."
File contains to copy prints of the patent for a camera issued to George Eastman on September 4, 1888. George Eastman invented the first Kodak camera 100 years ago. He was issued US patent number 388,850.
File contains copy prints featuring images with the caption: "In 1889, George Eastman introduced Flexible Film in rolls, a lightweight, non-breakable substitute for glass. The transparent nitro-cellulose roll film base was cast on theses 200-foot long tables."
File contains a print with the caption: The Eastman Company's "You press the Button, We do the rest" ad slogan in 1890 is still valid for today's "point and shoot" cameras.
Item is a print with the caption: The first Kodak camera brought photography to the public by reducing what had been a cumbersome process to "three motions."
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 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 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.
Caption adhered to verso of print reads: George Eastman's contribution to society included improving the quality of the workplace by pioneering such concepts as wage dividends, retirement annuities, life insurance and disability benefit plans for employees.
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."
File contains prints featuring images of Kodak during the war years. Images feature soldiers, speakers, performers, and plaques. Most are from the presentation of a Certificate of Honour to the employees of the Canadian Kodak Co., Ltd. for purchasing bonds of the Second Victory Loan.
File contains two copy prints from nitrate negatives 8JB. They feature images of George VI, Queen Elizabeth and Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret in their coronation robes.
Item is a photograph of what appears to be an abandoned construction site. An inscription on the bottom right corner reads: "Looking NE from 4th and 4 / Nov 18 1914".
Toronto, Ontario Mr. Robert C. Kirk (left) Manager of Graphics Imaging Systems, Kodak Canada Inc., presents a cheque in the amount of $5,00 to Ms. Jane Hawtin from Radio Station CKFM who accepts it on behalf of the station's Childrens fund. In turn Ms. Hawtin gives the cheque to Mr. Claus Wirsig, President of the Hospital for Sick Childrens Foundation. The presentation was made in recognition of the Hospital's outstanding work in the health care of young people. Robert Lansdale Photography
Item is a photographic copy print featuring an aerial view of Kodak Heights, with a stick on the verso that reads: Toronto Plant - / the Canadian Kodak Co., Limited / 3500 Eglinton Avenue West / Toronto 15, Ontario.
Item is a photographic print featuring an image of Kodak Heights Building 7. Inscription in pencil on verso reads: "Building 7 construction complete / page 1 / picture E / depth 3 1/4" / width 4 3/4"
Item is a print featuring an aerial view of Kodak Canada with text that reads: "KODAK WAS FOUNDED AND GREW TO ITS PRESENT SIZE / PRIMARILY BECAUSE OF THE HIGH QUALITY OF ITS PRODUCTS, / WHICHOVER THE YEARS BROUGHT CUSTOMER PRAISE AND / PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP. THE FUTURE OF THIS COMPANY AND / CONSEQUENTLY THE WELFARE OF ALL THE KODAK PEOPLE, / DEPENDS ON MAINTAINING THIS REPUTATION FOR HIGH / QUALITY PHOTOGRAPHIC PRODUCTS. / WE CANNOT BY INSPECTION ALONE GUARANTEE THE QUALITY / OF KODAK PRODUCTS - IT MUST BE BUILT INTO THEM BY THE / SKILLED CRAFTMANSHIP AND PRIDE OF WORKSMANSHIP ON / THE PART OF EVERY OPERATOR."
File contains four prints featuring an identical image of the Kodak Processing Lab in Vancouver, BC and 4 identical prints featuring aerial views of Kodak Heights in the 1970s.
File contains prints featuring exterior views of the Canadian Kodak Co., Ltd. Colborne Street location, with a Canadian Kodak Co. delivery truck parked in front.
File contains prints featuring exterior views of the Canadian Kodak Co., Ltd. King Street location. One building has a sign that reads "Canadian Rail & Harbour Terminals".