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Special Collections With digital objects
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"Five-a-Minute and a Million!"

Item is an article about the Phototeria, written by Frederick Griffin and published in the Toronto Star Weekly on April 14th, 1928.

Griffin, Frederick

"Slot machine makes perfect portraits"

Item is an article published in the Science and Invention magazine, in 1927. The article details the Photomaton, a photo booth similar to the Phototeria, invented by Anatol N. Josepho, and located at 1659 Broadway, in New York City.

Science and invention magazine

1994 Digital Records

This sub-series contains one digital file, the 1994 festival program guide titled "HOT DOCS NATIONAL DOCUMENTARY FILM AWARDS FEBRUARY 24-27 1994 TORONTO.pdf"

1995 Digital Records

This sub-series contains one digital file, the 1995 festival program guide titled "HOT DOCS THE 1995 CANADIAN INDEPENDENT FILM CAUCUS NATIONAL DOCUMENTARY AWARDS.pdf"

1996 Digital Records

This sub-series contains one digital file, the 1996 festival program guide titled "THE CANADIAN INDEPENDENT FILM CAUCUS DOCUMENTARY AWWARDS HOT DOCS 96 MARCH 21-24 1996.pdf"

1997 Digital Records

This sub-series contains one digital file, the 1997 festival program guide titled "HOT DOCS 97 MARCH 19-23 1997 METROPOLITAN HOTEL TORONTO CANADA.pdf"

1998 Digital Records

This sub-series contains one digtial file, the 1998 festival program titled "5TH ANNUAL CANADIAN INTERNATIONAL DOCUMENTARY FESTIVAL AND AWARDS - HOT DOCS 98 MARCH 18-22 METRO.pdf"

1999 Digital Records

This sub-series contains one digital file, the 1999 festival program titled "CANADIAN INTERNATIONAL DOCUMENTARY FILM FESTIVAL - HOT DOCS MAY 5-9 1999 TORONTO, CANADA.pdf"

2000 Digital Records

This sub-series contains one digital file, the 2000 festival program guide titled "CANADIAN INTERNATIONAL DOCUMENTARY [FILM] FESTIVAL - HOT DOCS MAY 1-7 2000 TORONTO.pdf"

2001 Digital Records

This sub-series contains one digital file, the 2001 festival program guide titled "CANADIAN INTERNATIONAL DOCUMENTARY FILM FESTIVAL - HOT DOCS APRIL 30 MAY 6 2001 TORONTO PROGRAMME.pdf"

A.W. Cluff & P.J. Cluff Architectural Firm

  • F 2006.003
  • Fonds
  • 1950-2006

This fonds contains published and grey-literature textual records collected by the architect Pamela Cluff and her firm “A.W. Cluff & P.J. Cluff Architects” and used as part of the firm's small reference library. The items in this collection have a strong subject focus on architecture and interior design for elderly and alternately-abled users.

Agfa Isolette I

Item is a folding camera for 6 x 6 cm roll film exposures. Shutter release is on the body, but there was no double exposure prevention. Equipped with a Agnar F4.5/85mm lens with Vario shutter.

Agfa Karat 3.5

Item is a 35mm camera, using a proprietary 12 exposure film cassette with no moving parts. The sprockets of the camera simply pull the film out and push it into an empty cartridge on the other side. This system with some modifications eventually lead to the design of the Instamatic format. The shutter on or model is a Prontor -S and the lens an Agfa Apotar 1; 3.5 F= 55mm. No rangefinder, simple optical viewfinder. The camera body is a " Strut " design, allowing the front to fold easily.

Agfa Karat 36

Item consists of an early model of the Agfa Karat 36 35mm camera, also known as the Karomat 36. It has a Compur-Rapid 1-500 shutter, a Schneider-Kreuznach Xenon 1:2/50mm lens, and an optical viewfinder with superimposed rangefinder. It was the first of the Agfa series of Karat cameras to move from Rapid cassettes to 35mm cartridge film. It strongly resembles the Karat 12, but features an accessory shoe, a rotating time exposure lock, and a film rewind knob instead of a depth of field dial.

Agfa-Gevaert N.V.

Agfa Silette Type 1

Item is a simple 35mm camera with Agfa Apotar 1:3.5 45mm lens, Pronto SVS shutter with sync contact, it includes a leather case, And an electric light meter "primat" - also in it's own leather case.

Agfa Standard Type 254

Item is a folding roll film camera for 6 x 9 cm. exposures. Equipped with a brillant and optic viewfinders and Agfa-Anastigmat, 4.5/10.5 cm lens.

Agfa synchro box 600

Item is a metal box camera for 8, 6 x 9 cm (2.36" x 3.54") exposures on 120 film. The simple design includes a single-element Meniscus lens, fixed speed rotary shutter and brilliant viewfinder.

Agfamatic II

Item is a typical, affordable, point and shoot camera of the sixties. The lens is an Agfa Color Apotar F1:2.8 45mm. Pronormatic shutter, selenium type light meter integrated into top of camera, distances had to be set manually. The camera was distributed under the brand name Optima II outside of Canada. A hard leather field case is included with the camera.

Agfa-Gevaert N.V.

Ansco Memo

Item is a leather covered wooden box camera. The Ansco Memo is a single frame, fixed focus which takes landscape oriented images. Film is advanced by pushing down on a lever in the back of the camera. While not the first American camera made for 35mm film, it is the first to sell in abundant quantities.

Ansco Shur-Flash

Item is an inexpensive box camera made of fiberboard and covered with imitation leather. The camera has a Gallileo-type viewfinder only (no brilliant viewfinder), flash contacts, and a single speed shutter that is fast enough to accommodate bulb flashes. It used 120 size roll film.

Ansco Vest Pocket No.0

Item is a small, folding strut camera for making 4 x 6.5cm exposures on 127 film. Unlike folding bed cameras, the lens remains exposed (on the outside of the camera) when the camera is collapsed. Lens is an Ansco Anastigmat f6.3.

Anscoflex

Item is an all-metal camera designed by Raymond Loewy for 6 x 6 cm (2.36" x 2.36") exposures on 620 film. Designed to mimic the look of a twin lens camera, the topmost "lens" is in fact a brilliant viewfinder, it is a simple box camera design with a two element Meniscus F11 lens and fixed 1/60th shutter speed. The front panel slides up to reveal the lens and viewfinder.

Results 1 to 100 of 1990