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Eastman Kodak Company Item
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Making the most of your Ciné-Kodak (Model A) / Eastman Kodak Company

Item is an illustrated guidebook detailing techniques for making motion pictures with Kodak's Ciné-Kodak camera. The guide was printed after the Ciné-Kodak Model B was marketed in 1925, an invention which caused the name of the original Ciné-Kodak camera to change to the Ciné-Kodak Model A.

Kodak Canada Inc.

Making the most of your Ciné-Kodak / Eastman Kodak Company

Item is an illustrated guidebook detailing techniques for making motion pictures with Kodak's Ciné-Kodak camera. The guide was printed before the Ciné-Kodak Model B was marketed in 1925, an invention which caused the name of the original Ciné-Kodak camera to change to the Ciné-Kodak Model A.

Kodak Canada Inc.

Looking through gold [information flyer]

X-ray radiograph image republished on an information flyer with a brief description of the material being reproduced. A photograph of the sarcophagus of King Tutankhamon was provided by the Laboratories of the Louvre Museum for reproduction in the flyer.

Eastman Kodak Company

Making the invisible visible [information flyer]

X-ray radiograph images republished on an information flyer with a brief description of the materials being reproduced. Photographs of the Dead Sea scrolls were taken using Kodak Infrared Film, and were provided by the Palestine Archeological Museum of Jerusalem for reproduction in the flyer.

Eastman Kodak Company

The discovery of x-rays

A copy of the x-ray radiographic image of Wilhelm Conrad Rontgen's wife's hand, taken in 1895, and reproduced in 1970 to celebrate the 75th anniversary of the discovery of x-ray imaging. The copy was made on Kodak RP/D X-OMAT Radiograph Duplicating Film. A piece of paper accompanying the image gives details of its creation.

Eastman Kodak Company

Kodak verichrome film boxes

Packaging for 3 rolls of Kodak Verichrome Film, opened and no longer containing film although they have been re-glued shut. The 3 boxes were designed for various sizes and speeds: 120 film at 2 1/4 x 3 1/4 inches, 116 film at 2 1/2 x 4 1/4 inches, 124 film at 3 1/4 x 4 1/4 inches. The packages are stamped with develop by dates: Nov 1934, Nov 1935, Dec 1935.

Eastman Kodak Company

Kodak non-curling orthochromatic film cartridge boxes

Packaging for 3 rolls Kodak Non-Curling Orthochromatic film, opened. Two boxes still contain rolled sheets with instructions for use. One large box of 128 film, size 3 1/4 x 5 1/2, is stamped with directions to develop before July 1, 1912. The package was produced in Rochester, NY and printed in French, German and Spanish for sale in European markets. Two small boxes contained 116 film, size 2 1/2 x 4 1/4. One package is stamped with a develop-by date of Mar. 1, 1915. There is a sticker taped across this package with the words "Extra Rapid Eastman Speed Film". The second package is in English only, with instructions to use by October 1928.

Eastman Kodak Company

Kodak Tourist Adapter Kit

Item is an kit used to adapt the Kodak Tourist camera to use different film formats (828, full 620, half 620, 120) with exposures of 28 x 40mm, 5.7 x 8.25 cm, 4.14 x 5.7 cm, and 5.7 x5.7 cm respectively. The kit includes a special camera back, spool and holder, picture masks, view finder masks and a case. Imported by Canadian Kodak Company.

Kodak Canada Inc.

Kodak Flasholder Model B

Item is an external flash bulb holder for use with "cameras equipped with Kodak 'Flash' shutters". Features include a polished aluminum reflector, bulb ejector button, bracket and exposure table. Imported by Canadian Kodak Co. Limited.

Kodak Canada Inc.

Kodacolor Gold keychain

Item consists of a Kodacolor Gold 36 exp. 200 film for color prints keychain. Keychain is yellow with black text and is the shape of a roll of 35 mm film.

Munro, Allan

Kodak liquid retouching colors

Item is a set of colour pigments, produced by the Eastman Kodak Company and used to touch up colour prints and transparencies. The set contains 10 pigments; green, cyan, blue, magenta, red, yellow, orange, brown, neutral and reducer.

Eastman Kodak Company

Wratten gelatin filter

Item is a set of 6 filters used in photographic printing to alter the contrast and range of values in prints. Developed by C.E. Kenth Mees for the Wrattan & Wainwrite in 1906, the company was purchased by Eastman Kodak company in 1912.

Eastman Kodak Company

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