File contains photographs taken on campus of spray painted messages related to Egerton Ryerson and his role in Residential Schools in Canada. The messages were created in response to the discovery of the remains of 215 children at the site of the former Kamloops Indian Residential School located on the Tk'emlúps te Secwépemc First Nation. On June 6, 2021 after a march and rally in Toronto, the statue of Egerton Ryerson was pulled down. The plinth it sat on was later removed by the University. The photographs were commissioned by the Office of the President and were taken after the statue was pulled down and the plinth was removed. The photographs are of the messages of protest that were spray painted and chalked on the walls of Kerr Hall, the sidewalk and road in front of where the statue was located, on the stones in Lake Devo, and on the walkways in the Kerr Hall Quadrangle. There are also photographs of the areas around where the messages were located - Gould Street and the Kerr Hall Quadrangle.
File contains a letter and a certificate from the University of St. Michael's College in the University of Toronto's President and Vice-Chancellor Anne Anderson to commemorate Chancellor Bloomberg's installation. Also in the file is a business card for Anne Anderson.
File consists of 3 photographs. 2 feature images of Buildings #27 catwalk North of the power house (1923), and 1 features image of an addition to building #4 (1927).
File contains 5 photographs and 2 contact sheets featuring images of a Kodak employee demonstrating the re-use of plastic camera pieces at gelatin blending building 6.
File contains photographs featuring images of Kodak employees applying Workplace Hazardous Materials Information System (WHMIS) labels on Kodak chemicals at the Distribution Centre [building 11] warehouse.
File consists of 2 contact sheets and 2 prints featuring images of a life-sized cutout french advertisement at the Image Centre in Toronto for Kodak Colorwatch System, featuring an image of a man holding a baby standing beside a dog wearing a birthday hat and sunglasses and a stuffed Kosmic the Kolorkin mascot toy.
File contains photographs from Bruce Fraser's (1954-2006) 40th anniversary with Kodak. He was a pioneer in the field of digital photography. Location - B-9 Presentation Room
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 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. King Street location. One building has a sign that reads "Canadian Rail & Harbour Terminals".
File contains images of employees in Kodak Canada's Film Testing Department. Many are inscribed with instructional captions. An image of Jeff Metcalfe reads "Mark at left as indicated. Make engraving 16 pieces wide, 12 1/2 pieces high. October 1953 KODAK".
File contains images of Kodak products piled as Christmas presents, such as the Instamatic M4 and the complete Super 8 home movie outfit, beneath a 'Season's Greetings' picture with hand drawn signs that have slogans like 'open me first' or 'gift idea'.
File contains photographs taken around Kodak Heights during the war years. Included are images of marching bands, people looking out building windows, and victory bonds presentations.
File contains prints featuring images of the "York Mayor Alan Tonks (left) and Kodak Canada President Ron Morrison, breaking ground for the new distribution centre", of "Bert Barker measures dispersion material in basement of building #13", of the Itematic Dispenser used at Kodak, and of employees Eric Sibbald, Paul Oliver, Maureen MacGillivary, and Berenice Moore at work at Kodak Heights. Images featured in Vol. 1 No. 3 of In Focus. Subject info adhered to each.
File contains two prints featuring images of a book titled "New visions for Canadian business... Strategies for competing in the global economy". A header on the cover of the book reads "A study by Alan M. Rugman and Joseph R. D'Cruz Faculty of Management, University of Toronto". There is also a Kodak logo on the bottom left corner.
File contains transparencies featuring images of a man in a lab coat standing at the of a Kodak's Signature Color Proofing System machine, explaining the information on its monitor to a woman. Located at Batten Graphics. For black and white prints see 2005.001.06.03.079.
File consists of 3 images of employees at the Kodak Heights Distribution Centre [building 11] warehouse, packaging boxes of Kodak products along a conveyor belt to be shipped to retailers.
File contains transparencies featuring images of two male Kodak employees moving bars of silver nitrate from a forklift into a metal drum at building 14.
Scans of architectural drawings taken from the Archives of Ontario in 1984 for Ryerson's Bicentennial display project. Images show various external and internal views of the Normal School building. This file includes printout from Archives of Ontario explaining their collection.
File contains 3 blueprints (2 cyanotype reproductions) related to the original land proposal for the Kodak Heights factory in Ontario, showing the outline of the area including proposed buildings, Eglinton and Yonge streets, as well as surrounding lots and concessions. Blueprints pertain specifically to the construction of a steel railway trestle connecting Canadian Pacific rail lines to the Kodak Heights power house (Building 1)
Single family dwelling, split-level ranch with porch clad in brick and vinyl siding. Photograph is stamped property of Canadian Housing Design Council. A piece of paper accompanying the image indicates this structure was entered into competition for the National Design Awards in 1964.
File consists of 13 rolls of Kodak Gold General Use film for colour prints, all in original packaging. Of these, 6 are individually packaged 200 ISO with 12 exposures, 1 individually packaged roll with 200 ISO and 24 exposures, and 6 rolls that form 2 3-packs of 200 ISO film with 24 exposures. Develop before dates are from 08/2002 to 11/2004.
File consists of 4 individually packaged rolls of Kodak Gold Max Self-Adjusting 800 ISO film for colour prints. 2 rolls with 12 exposures and 2 with 24 exposures. Develop before date is 07/1999.
File contains recorded and transcribed copies of an interview conducted with Swedish film director Marianne Ahrne and Toronto Psychiatrist Dr. Frank Sommers, for Sommers' project "The Mind of the Film Director. Also included are 2 letters from Marianne Ahrne to Frank Sommers, including photographic stills from her films, promotional publications for the 1976 film Near and Far Away and the 1976 film Roots of Grief, and news clippings from the Globe and Mail related to Ahrne's films.
File contains a short, transcribed, copy of an interview conducted with Dutch film director Bert Haanstra by Toronto Psychiatrist Dr. Frank Sommers, for Sommers' project "The Mind of the Film Director. Also included are a filmography and list of Haanstra's awards, photographic stills from Haanstra's films, and a one page description of Dr. Sommers' book project.
Photograph of the interior lobby/hallway in the hospital located at 520 Sutherland Drive in Toronto. A half-wall in wood panneling separates the space.
Architect's model and exterior view of finished high rise residential condominium located at 480 Queens Quay West in Toronto, designed with stepped levels and walls of glass windows.
Exterior view of a house at 4 Old George Place in Toronto. The style is influenced by Japanese, West Coast Canadian and Native Canadian architecture, with sloping rooflines and durable materials that integrate with a natural setting. The structure is made of red brick, interspersed with cedar sections and glass panes.
Photographs of the exterior of a planned community in Toronto, with both high rise and townhouse structures. Views of the highrise block under construction. One interior view of a living room and dining room inside one of the two-storey townhouses.
Photographs of the exterior of the building also known as the "Flatiron" at 49 Wellington Street East in Toronto. The Romanesque Revival building was constructed in 1892 as an office building and has been designated a heritage property. The photographs in this file were probably taken to illustrate the construction of the CN Tower, contrasting with an older, well-known city landmark and showing the effects on the skyline before and after.
Interior church decoration, featuring metal letters adhered to the wall with phrases such as "God is Love". Views of altar and worship space, located at 41 Chatsworth Drive near Lawrence and Yonge Streets in Toronto.
Streetscapes, showing Ed's Warehouse on King Street West in Toronto, next to the Royal Alexandra Theatre and an advertisement for Old Ed's, one in the group of warehouse restaurants, from the Lakeshore Boulevard.
Interior and exterior views of a high-rise office tower and lower-level shopping concourse, designed in glass and concrete. One view of courtyard outside the building. Shopping area shows a Mappins retail store and a telephone booth.
Photograph of a street sign situated in the middle of a grassy lawn, with office buildings in background. This image was taken as part of a commentary on colonnades for a special article in Canadian Architect magazine, titled "Citizen and the City". A part of the caption reads: "When the street is removed, both the colonnade and the building are removed from the public realm to the acropolis and we as citizens are left, not with a way through, but a way around." (p.32)
Originally built in 1890 as the Olivet Congregational Church, converted to a shopping complexe in 1973. Discussed in the November 1974 issue of Canadian Architect magazine.