File consists of 9 colour aerial photographs of Kodak Canada's Kodak Heights facility at Eglinton Avenue and Weston Road, Toronto, Ontario. One photograph, likely taken circa 1986, shows the Kodak Heights building numbers. Some photographs dated on verso.
File contains two prints featured in In Focus September 1986, Vol. 1 No. 4. They feature an image of Lou Berger with a cut across his forehead, and of the safety glasses that saved him from serious eye damage.
Item is a group photograph of members of the Apparatus Service department in 1950. the photograph is stamped on the verso by W.P. Edwards, along with the following 3 inscribed names: Dave Rycroft, Mr. McLoughlin, Jack Mitchell.
File contains group portrait negatives of museum affiliates holding a portrait of John G. Palmer (ca. 1853-1921), president of the Canadian Kodak Co. from 1918 until his death in 1921. He is often credited as the company's first president.
Original label: "30 - Fire drill" from box 2. Item features an exterior view of individuals evacuating a building at Kodak Heights from a series of staircases.
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.
Item is a colour transparency featuring an image of a man and two bulls standing beside the Saddler & Harness Maker building at Black Creek Pioneer Village.
Item consists of a poster featuring an image of a woman standing on a beach holding a parasol and a camera. Beneath reads "L'heure de recreation est l'heure de votre KODAK".
Item consists of a colour poster featuring an image of a man inspecting strips of coloured light through a device. Beneath the image text reads "Filmcoating Lab - 1989".
3 pins with butterfly clutches are attached to cards describing Kodak Canada's sponsorship of the Special Olympics World Winter Games taking place in Toronto and Collingwood, Ontario, February 1-8, 1997, including the specific ways they contributed to the event through camera and film technolgoy. The additional pins are individually packaged without the attached description. Pins represent a roll of Kodak Advantix Film with the Special Olympics logo and feature a cloisonne appearance.
Item is a wall plaque that reads: "[Trillium Health Centre Foundation logo] / Presented with sincere appreciation to / Kodak Canada Inc. / (Donor Wall Category - Sponsor) / For your support of Trillium Health Centre / Healping us provide the very best in health care". It has a black marble border and a cream coloured background with black text,
Item is a plaque with a gold border, cream-coloured background and black text. Text reads: A CERTIFICATE OF / APPRECIATION / The Alzheimer Society / Halton-Wentworth / Most Gratefully Acknowledges / The Contribution of / KODAK CANADA INC. / for supporting the / 2001 / "Celebrity Pour" / COFFEE BREAK / Your Kindness and Generosity Will Aid in Supporting / Programs and Services To Benefit Individuals and / Families Coping With This Degenerative Brain Disorder." It is signed by two members of the fundraising committee, Marlene R. Burnett and Carolyn Kovacs.
Item is a painted black brass plaque, mounted on a brass plaque, mounted on wood. A blue, red and gold version of the Children's Wish Foundation logo is mounted above gold text that reads: "Inrecognition of the support / and encouragement afforded / The Children's Wish Foundation of Canada / This plaque of appreciation is presented to / KODAK CANADA INC. / whose contribution towards realizing / the wishes of children suffereing from / high risk life-threatening illnesses / is greatfully acknowledged."
Item is a brass plaque mounted on wood with engraved text that reads: The / Eglinton Community Initiative / Gratefully Acknowledges the / Support and Contribution of / KODAK CANADA / to the ECI From / 1999/2000".
Item is a glass plaque with an image of a rainbow and a tree in a park that reads: "WEST PARK HOSPITAL / FOUNDATION / In the Spirit of Triumph / In Recognition of the / Official Unveiling and Dedication of / Milestone Way on Kodak Boulevard / May 30, 1999". Previously in frame.
Item is a brass plaque mounted on wood that has been engraved with the words: "The Eglinton Community Initiative / gratefully acknowledges / the support & contribution of / KODAK CANADA INC. / to the ECI from / 1996-1999".
Item is a No. 2C Kodak Junior, made for use with the No. A-130 autographic film cartridge and capable of taking 10 exposures. It is a large sized camera with black leather casing and bellows, metal clasps and slide. It was originally priced at $27.00.
Item is a medium sized brownie camera, black leather casing and bellows. Metal clasps and slide. Equipped with Kodak Ball bearing shutter. Made for use with 120 Autographic film.
Item is a large format folding bed camera with black leather casing and bellows, metal clasps and slide. It takes postcard size images with a Ball Bearing Shutter No. 2 and f7.7 Kodak Anastigmat lens. Features included adjustable focus with automatic focusing lock, reversible finder and two tripod sockets.
Item is a medium format camera with large bulb flash attachment, black casing and bellows, metal clasps and folding viewfinder. Originally sold for US $38, it was made for use with 620 film and features a body similar to cameras of the Kodak Monitor series.
Item is a medium format hand held box camera built of black plastic and metal case. It features a Kodak Duex lens, black plastic winding knob and raised viewfinder. Strap attached. Made for use with 620 film.
Item is a folding camera with black casing, black leather bellows and metal clasps. It is a smaller model of the Vigilant Junior Six-16, and similar to the Kodak Vigilant Six-20 but with a simpler lens and shutter.
Item is a small camera with moulded brown and tan plastic body. Made for use with 127 roll film, it has an eyelevel viewfinder, Dakon lens and a rotary shutter. Prior to 1955 it was made with a Kodet lens.
Item consists of a small format camera. It has a Kodak Flash 300 Shutter 1/25-1/300, a 44mm f/3.5 Kodak Anaston Lens and uses 135 film format. It features a faster shutter and a shorter focal length to previous models. The body is made of brown Bakelite. Above the lens is an aperture scale for Kodachrome and Ektachrome films.
Item is a plastic camera with black leatherette casing and metal fittings. It features a Kodar lens f8 with settings for close-ups and distance. Flash socket behind latched door on left side of camera (no bulb included). Strap attached.
Item is a small rectangular camera with a black plastic body, flip out lens, and a 22mm f/5.6 lens. Made for the Canadian market, it reads "appareil Kodak EKTRALITE camera" beside a silver on green number "30".
Similar to the Instamatic X-35, this small hand held camera has black moulded plastic casing meant to look like leatherette, and two brown faux leather panel details on the front on either side of lens. A bright red plate above lens reads "KODAK / INSTAMATIC X-35F". A switch at the top indicates the two Kodar lens focus settings for "beyond 6 feet" or "2 to 6 feet". Fitted with a Flipflash socket. Kodak wrist strap attached. Manufactured for the Canadian market, 'camera' is written on the nameplate in English and in French. Made for use with 126 cartridge film.
Item is a small automatic exposure camera with leatherette and metal case and a Kodar lens. Lens can be adjusted at the top with a switch that indicates to the user "beyond 6 feet" or "2 to 6 feet", allowing for relatively close-up photography. Wrist strap attached. Made for use with 126 cartridge film and flashcubes.
Item is a small, fixed-focus, snapshot camera with metal and black leatherette casing and tan bakelite accent around the front panel. It features a large winding knob on top left. that when would would automatically load the film to the first frame. Made for use with 126 cartridge film, this camera has a facility for flashcubes.
Item is a simple snapshot camera with a black plastic imitation leather body, metal fittings and a light tan plastic accent border around faceplate. Made for use with 126 cartridge film, the Instamatic 134 features an electronic exposure control and a flashcube facility. It has an f/11, 43mm lens and a shutter speed of 1/50 sec. Wrist strap attached.
Styled similarly to the Hawkeye Instamatic II, this basic snapshot camera has a flashcube socket. This all-black model was the lowest-price Instamatic produced by Kodak, and the first Kodak to be "carded" for self-service sales. A similar camera, with no flashcube socket, was produced in Brazil as the Instamatic 11. It features an f/11 lens and 1/50 shutter. Made for use with 126 cartridge film. Raised metal text on front reads "MADE IN CANADA".
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.
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 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.
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.
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 consists of a folding black camera with black bellows, black plastic body, and black handle. Includes a tripod mount, folding frame finder on the body, and another optical finder near the shutter. Kodet lens with Dak shutter. "Kodak Vigilant Junior six-20 Made in Canada by Canadian Kodak Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont."
Item is a basic 12 exposure snapshot camera featuring a built-in flashgun for AG-1 bulbs. This camera shows a family resemblance to the Brownie Fiesta, with beige (wheat) and red (sienna) plastic body and black neck strap. Uses 127 film. Film left in camera.
Item is a fixed-focus medium-format camera with Kodet Lens and Kodalite Flashholder (bulb flash). Body is brown ("chocolate") with brown neck strap. The styling is of a twin-lens reflex camera, but the viewing screen is for framing purposes only. Uses type 620 format film, not 120. Almost identical to the Duaflex III except for the two-tone brown finish and restyled front plate.
Item is a folding camera in metal and leatherette case. It features a ball bearing shutter, Kodak Astigmatic lens (f7.7, 130mm), and a pivoting brilliant viewfinder. Took 116 roll film.
Item consists of a large format film folding bed camera, built for use with Kodak No. 1A 130 Autographic roll film cartridges to make a picture of 7 x 12 cm. The body is built of aluminum with seal grain leather covering. Fitted with a meniscus achromatic lens and Kodak Ball Bearing Shutter.
Item is a simple snapshot camera with a built-in electronic flash. It has a small, thin horizontal design with black plastic body and flashcube on right. Film-wind wheel centrally mounted on the back of the camera. Comes in original orange plastic packaging (unopened) with a roll of 110 film and 2 AAA batteries.
Item consists of a Kodak Hawkeye 8 Movie Camera. The camera was patented by Eastman Kodak Company in Rochester, and was made by Canadian Kodak Co. Limited. It has a Kodak Ektanar Lens 13m f/2.3 and is made of plastic. It used 8mm film and was sold for 19.99 when released in 1963.
Item consists of a disposable camera for Outdoor Only loaded with a 24 exposure roll of Kodacolor Gold 400 ISO 35mm film for colour prints. New in box. Develop before date is July 1996.
Item is a small camera with a rectagular body made of black plastic and a green #1 on the top. Made for use with 110 cartridge film, it is a basic camera with fixed focus and a flipflash connector. Made for the Canadian market, this camera is labelled in French and English, and reads "appareil Kodak EKTRA camera" in silver above the green #1. Camera is in original packaging (opened) with roll of 110 film, instruction booklet and strap included.
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)