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Kodak Canada Corporate Archives and Heritage Collection Bestanddeel Kodak Canada Ltd.
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Canadian Kodakery : a publication for the men and women of Kodak in Canada / Canadian Kodak Co., Ltd.

Running from 1955 to 1975, Canadian Kodakery was a monthly Kodak Canada publication designed to communicate the activities of employees at Kodak Heights in Toronto, Ontario. The publicaton succeeded the magazine Kodak. The newer publication included a larger format than its predecessor, as well as new features. Collection includes vol. 1, no. 1 (Sept. 1955) to vol. 20, no. 6 (Aug./Sept 1975).

The full lineage of internal publications for Kodak Canada employees ran as follows: At Kodak Heights was succeeded by Kodak in 1936. In 1955, the name was changed to Canadian Kodakery. In 1975, the name was changed again to Kodak Canada News. In 1986, this publication was succeeded by In Focus; and in 1994, the name changed to its final title, Kodakery Canada.

Kodak Canada Inc.

At Kodak Heights / Canadian Kodak Co.

At Kodak Heights was a bimonthly magazine, first published in January 1921, intended to foster communication among employees of Canadian Kodak Co. Ltd.

The full lineage of internal publications for Kodak Canada employees ran as follows: At Kodak Heights was succeeded by Kodak in 1936. In 1955, the name was changed to Canadian Kodakery. In 1975, the name was changed again to Kodak Canada News. In 1986, this publication was succeeded by In Focus; and in 1994, the name changed to its final title, Kodakery Canada.

Kodak Canada Inc.

Canadian Kodak customs letters

File consists of a folder of letters, primarily between members of Canadian Kodak Co. Ltd., Eastman Kodak Co., and Canadian Customs, related to the traffic of Kodak products across the Canada-U.S. border as part of shipments from Eastman Kodak to Canadian Kodak.

Kodak Canada Inc.

Publications containing Kodak advertising or publicity

File includes miscellaneous publications--including magazines, newsletters, and periodicals--containing Kodak advertising or other forms of Kodak publicity. Publications include:

-Chatelaine (Dec. 1933) (Advertisement missing)
-Canadian Photography (Dec. 1952)
-Focus (Feb., 1953)
-OSP Pho-topics (Apr. 1954)
-Popular Photography (Sept. 1956)
-Business Week (June 20, 1977)
-Forbes (September 3 1979)
-Tooton's Photography News (Sept./Oct. 1988)
-Photo Metro (Mar. 1989)
-Time Magazine (Fall 1989)
-The Canadian Shopper (Feb. 1997)
-Photography in New York (Mar./Apr. 1998)
-Playback (January 11, 1999)
-Today's Parent (Oct. 1999)
-Marketing Magazine (Dec. 1999)
-Report on Business (Dec. 2003)

Kodak Canada Inc.

Camera repair 1950-1975

File consists of photographs of employees from Kodak's Camera Repair department. Includes groups shots and portraits of employees at their work stations. Some names of the employees photographed are listed on the envelop and image verso.

Kodak Canada Inc.

In the good old summer time

Black and white composited of 6 images pasted to a board with "In the Good Old Summer Time" printed on it. Photographs feature the men's baseball team and company lawn bowling games. It was published in the November 1921 edition of the employee newsletter "At Kodak Heights".

Kodak Canada Inc.

Collective bargaining agreements

File consists of 13 collective bargaining agreements made between 1966 and 1997. Agreements for the years 1966 to 1974 are made between Kodak Canada and Local 159 of the International Chemical Workers' Union. Agreements for the years 1978 to 1997 are made between Kodak Canada and the Employees' Association of Kodak Canada. Kodak Canada employees were later represented by the Steelworkers' Union.

Kodak Canada Inc.

Records related to photograph production and publication

File contains records created in the production and publication of promotional photographs. Documents include: image captions for photographs of individuals, products, and war-related munitions work; picture files for photographs for the 1962 annual report; correspondence with external individuals requesting usage rights; correspondence regarding the Kodak commemorative stamp photographs, product images, and Kodak Ltd.'s coronation photographs; and photography release forms. Most records in file were unfortunately divorced from their accompanying photographs at some point during their life cycle.

Kodak Canada Inc.

Second annual Kodak minstrel show

The first image, Burgess & Seymour, a study in black and white, depicts two Canadian Kodak employees, one identified as draftsman F.A. Seymour and the other as R. Ainslee Burgess. They performed a skit originally performed in the Canadian Kodak Minstrel Show of February 17-18, 1921, which was, according to an included clipping, repeated at a bazaar held by the Toronto Technical School. The skit consists of two easels, on which the two performers have drawn sketches of different Kodak girls. One of the performers (Burgess) is in blackface, as part of the Minstrel variety show performed during the 1920's by Kodak employees as part of the Kodak Athletics Association (KAA) activities.

The second image is a group portrait of the Kodak minstrel troupe consisting of 29 men in black face and their accompanying 7 musicians and conductor. They performed at the same event as Burgess and Seymour, February 1921.

Minstrel shows are a style of variety show, most popular during the late 19th and early 20th century, in which white performers use make-up and costumes to depict racist and stereotypical caricatures of Black people. The genre originated in the United States, but Canada had its own troupes and touring companies, and the format was popular with schools, community groups, and religious organizations.

Kodak Canada Inc.

Kodak Heights Building #5

Appear to be loose prints from the Kodak Heights series of albums that document the construction of Kodak Heights during 1913-1917, See related records for albums: 2005.001.06.01.002. Note that a group of these prints were organized in a separate box, P-56 and P-64, they have been assigned the same number and the different locations noted in the record.

Kodak Canada Inc.

Reproductions of employment contracts for John G. Palmer and Eben J. Quigley

File contains reproductions of 3 employee contracts. The first, originally dated August 9, 1899, details the employment contract between John G. Palmer and Eastman Kodak Company. John G. Palmer became the treasurer of Canadian Kodak Co., Ltd., in 1899 and the company's first president in 1918. The latter two contracts, originally dated October 13, 1917 and January 1, 1923, detail the employment contract made between photographic emulsion maker, Eben J. Quigley, and Eastman Kodak Company.

Kodak Canada Inc.

Contracts and correspondence between Canadian Kodak Co., Ltd. and Canadian Kodak Sales Limited

File includes original contracts, dated December 28, 1938, and correspondence (1940-1964) between Canadian Kodak Co., Ltd. and Canadian Kodak Sales Limited. Contracts pertain to the sale and transfer of vending rights of Kodak products from Canadian Kodak Co. to Canadian Kodak Sales Limited. Correspondence pertain to the terms of the original agreements. Canadian Kodak Sales Ltd. was incorporated on December 1, 1938 and acted as the distributing agent of Kodak products in Canada, thereby limiting Canadian Kodak's role to one of strict manufacturing.

Kodak Canada Inc.

New visions for Canadian business... book

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.

Kodak Canada Inc.

Kodak promotional images of bullfighting, fishing, football and nature

File contains promotional images of various sporting and nature activities, including fishing, bull fighting, a deer in a sunset, baby birds in a nest, a white dove, a dog looking through a hole in a fence, a deer and fawn, and football. Most images are of bull fighting. One caption included with a bull fighting image reads: "When a camera incorporates a motor drive as the new Kodak's 300MD does, it only seems right to explore the potential in a series of pictures."

Kodak Canada Inc.

Commercial portraits or children

File contains commercial images of children attending birthday parties, wearing costumes, at weddings and with family. Some have captions enclosed, such as an image of children wearing fake moustaches with a caption that reads "If you want pictures in which children aren't looking directly at the camera and your subjects aren't cooperating, have them pretend that your camera is a "monster" that will get them if they look at it."

Kodak Canada Inc.

Commercial portraits of children and photography

File includes commercial prints of children blowing bubbles, sitting on stairs, and flushing the toilet. Some have captions enclosed, such as one of a young girl observing a photograph that reads "Watching her own picture develop before her eyes will delight and fascinate your child and help make her an interested model as well."

Kodak Canada Inc.

Kodak Fling 35 promotional images

File contains a variety of promotional images, including beauty portraits, city landscapes, desert landscapes, Kodak cameras, sand dune shorelines, and goats. Many include captions, such as a print of a group of girls at a picnic table "If you receive an invitation to an outdoor gathering you cannot attend, you might send a Kodak Fling 35 camera in your place. Other attendees can use the camera-film combination easily to capture some of the merriment in pictures."

Kodak Canada Inc.

Kodak S Series promotional images

File contains promotional images of people riding bicycles in the rain, trees with narrow trunks, graduation ceremonies, and sculptures. All include captions, such as a close up of leaves: "Just about all of the new Kodak S Series cameras provide ways of adding flash to pictures taken in bright sunlight. The Kodak S500AF camera automatically fires its flash to lighten shadows."

Kodak Canada Inc.

Kodak employees - Will Chadwick, Medical Division Technical Representatives and others

File contains portraits and photographs from around Kodak. Inscribed on the verso of one notes Will Chadwick's 50th Anniversary with Canadian Kodak Co. on Sunday August 21, 1966. Other prints feature a man and woman working at seperate desks and a group portrait of the Eastman Kodak Company's Medical Division Technical Representatives from June 1954.

Kodak Canada Inc.

Kodak Heights and Kodak Brampton aerial views

File contains many duplicates of two views of Kodak Canada Inc. Brampton location that appear to be from the 1980s. Also, there are a number of views of Kodak Heights that appear to be from the 1960s. Additional prints feature views of the Kodak Processing Laboratory. One print, featuring a painted image by H.H. Angus & Associates Ltd. (engineers) and Allward & Gouinlock (architect) is housed with a caption that reads: Canadian Kodak's new processing laboratory will be the second major building at the company's new 200-acre property near Brampton, Ontario. A final print is a contact sheet featuring images of employees sitting around a computer monitor.

Kodak Canada Inc.

Kodak lawn bowling and professional figure skater

File contains two photographs. One features an image of a group of men lawn bowling with a sign in front that reads "38th Annual Kodak Rink Lawn Bowling Tournament for the Cornell Trophy". The other features an image of a male figure skater wearing a sweater with an image of Kodak Kolorkins on it, also seen in 2005.001.06.03.112.

Kodak Canada Inc.

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