- TitleKodak Museum Ephemera Collection
- ReferenceKOD
- Production date1888 - 1990
- Kodak MuseumBiographyBiography
- Kodak LtdBiographyBiographyKodak is a photographic and technological manufacturer. The company was founded by George Eastman and Henry A. Strong on 4th September 1888. In 1888 the first model of the Kodak camera appeared. It took round pictures 6.4 cm (2.5 in) in diameter, was of the fixed focus type, and carried a roll of film enough for 100 exposures. In 1889 The Eastman Company was formed. In 1891 George Eastman began to produce a second line of cameras, the Ordinary range. In 1892 the company was renamed the Eastman Kodak Company in 1892. The Kodak company thereby attained its name from the first simple roll film cameras produced by Eastman Dry Plate Company, known as the "Kodak" in its product line. In the early 1890s the first folding Kodak cameras were introduced. These were equipped with folding bellows that permitted much greater compactness. In 1895 the first pocket Kodak camera, the $5 Pocket Kodak, was introduced. The camera slipped easily into an ordinary coat pocket. In 1897 the first folding pocket Kodak camera was introduced. In 1898 George Eastman purchased the patent for Velox photographic paper from Leo Baekeland for $1,000,000. After this time, Velox paper was then sold by Eastman Kodak. In 1900 the Brownie camera was introduced, creating a new mass market for photography. In 1901 the present company, Eastman Kodak Company of New Jersey, was formed under the laws of that state. Eventually, the business in Jamestown was moved in its entirety to Rochester, and the plants in Jamestown were demolished. In 1920 Tennessee Eastman was founded as a wholly owned subsidiary. The company's primary purpose was the manufacture of chemicals, such as acetyls, needed for Kodak's film photography products. In 1930: Eastman Kodak Company was added to the Dow Jones Industrial Average index on July 18, 1930. The company remained listed as one of the DJIA companies for the next 74 years, ending in 2004. In 1935 Kodak introduced Kodachrome, a colour reversal stock for movie and slide film. Kodak branched out into the manufacture of hand-grenades in 1936. In 1959 Kodak introduced the Starmatic camera, the first automatic Brownie camera, which sold 10 million units over the next five years. In 1963 Kodak introduced the Instamatic camera, an inexpensive, easy-to-load, point-and-shoot camera. In 1975 Steven Sasson, then an electrical engineer at Kodak, invented a digital camera. In 1976 Kodak introduced the first Kodamatic, instant picture cameras, using a similar film and technology to that of the Polaroid company. In 1978 Kodak introduced the Ektachem clinical chemistry testing system. The system employs dry film technology, and within 5 years was being used by most hospitals in the country. In 1981 Kodak was sued by Polaroid for infringement of its Instant Picture patents. The suit ran for five years, the court finally finding in favour of Polaroid in 1986. In 1982 Kodak launched the Kodak Disc film format for consumer cameras. The format ultimately proved unpopular and was later discontinued. In 1986 Kodak scientists created the world's first megapixel sensor, capable of recording 1.4 million pixels and producing a photo-quality 12.5 cm × 17.5 cm (4.9 in × 6.9 in) print. In 1988 Kodak bought Sterling Drug for $5.1 Billion. In 1991 Kodak launched The Kodak Professional Digital Camera System or DCS, the first commercially available digital single-lens reflex (DSLR) camera. A customised camera back bearing the digital image sensor was mounted on a Nikon F3 body and released by Kodak in May; the company had previously shown the camera at photokina in 1990. In 1993 Eastman Chemical, a Kodak subsidiary founded by George Eastman in 1920 to supply Kodak's chemical needs, was spun off as a separate corporation. In 2003 Kodak introduced the Kodak EasyShare LS633 Digital Camera, the first camera to feature an AMOLED display, and the Kodak EasyShare Printer Dock 6000, the world's first printer-and-camera dock combination. In November 2003 Kodak acquired the Israel-based company Algotec Systems, a developer of advanced picture archiving and communication systems (PACS). In January 2004 Kodak announced that it would stop selling traditional film cameras in Europe and North America, and cut up to 15,000 jobs (around a fifth of its total workforce at the time). On April 8, 2004 Kodak was delisted from the Dow Jones Industrial Average index, having been a constituent for 74 consecutive years. In January 2005 Kodak acquired the Israel-based company OREX Computed Radiography, a provider of compact computed radiography systems that enable medical practitioners to acquire patient x-ray images digitally. The company also acquired the Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada-based company Creo. On 1st August 2006, Kodak agreed to divest its digital camera manufacturing operations to Flextronics, including assembly, production and testing. As part of the sale it was agreed that Flextronics would manufacture and distribute consumer digital cameras for Kodak, and conduct some design and development functions for it. Kodak kept high-level digital camera design in house, continued to conduct research and development in digital still cameras, and retained all intellectual property and patents. On 10th January 2007 Kodak agreed to sell Kodak Health Group to Onex Corporation for $2.35 billion in cash, and up to $200 million in additional future payments if Onex achieved specified returns on the acquisition. On 19th April 2007 Kodak announced an agreement to sell its light management films business, which produced films designed to improve the brightness and efficiency of liquid crystal displays, to Rohm and Haas. In January 2009 Kodak posted a $137 million fourth-quarter loss and announced plans to cut up to 4,500 jobs. On 22nd June 2009: Kodak announced that it would cease selling Kodachrome color film by the end of 2009, ending 74 years of production, after a dramatic decline in sales. During 2011, Kodak shares fell more than 80 percent. In January 2012 Kodak received a warning from the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) notifying it that its average closing price was below $1.00 for 30 consecutive days and that over the next 6 months it must increase the closing share price to at least $1 on the last trading day of each calendar month and have an average closing price of at least $1 over the 30 trading-days prior or it would be delisted. From the $90 range in 1997, Kodak shares closed at 76 cents on January 3, 2012. On January 8, 2012, Kodak shares closed over 50% higher after the company announced a major restructuring into two main divisions, one focused on products and services for businesses, and the other on consumer products including digital cameras. On 19th January 2012 Kodak filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Protection. The company's stock was delisted from NYSE and moved to OTC exchange. Following the news it ended the day trading down 35% at $0.36 a share. On 7th February 2012 the Image Sensor Solutions (ISS) division of Kodak was sold to Truesense Imaging Inc. On 9th February 2012: Kodak announced that it would exit the digital image capture business, phasing out its production of digital cameras. On 24th August 2012 Kodak announced that it plans to sell its film, commercial scanner and kiosk divisions. On 20th December 2012 Kodak announced that it plans to sell its digital imaging patents for about $525 million to some of the world’s biggest technology companies, thus making a step to end bankruptcy. On 29th April 2013 Kodak announced an agreement with the U.K. Kodak Pension Plan (KPP) to spin off Kodak’s Personalized Imaging and Document Imaging businesses and settle $2.8 Billion in KPP claims. On 17th October 2013 Kodak brings European headquarter and the entire EAMER Technology Centre under one roof in Eysins, Switzerland. The relocation brings the company's European headquarters and Inkjet demo facilities, which were based in Gland, Switzerland, and the Kodak EAMER Technology and Solutions Centre, which was based in La Hulpe, Belgium, together. In January 2017 Kodak announced it was bringing back its Ektachrome film.
- Scope and ContentThis is a large collection of paper-based materials gathered by the former Kodak Museum. The filing cabinets include files relating to products manufactured by Kodak including enlargers, lighting (studio, flash and safety), still and moving image camera, printers, processors, projectors and other photographic apparatus. There is also a large amount of information relating to other photographic manufacturers including Ilford. The materials contained within these files incorporate ephemera (advertising, clippings), promotional materials, instructional booklets, photographs, product catalogues and technical information about Kodak products.
- Extent10 filing cabinets
- Physical descriptionThe condition of this collection is fair.
- LanguageEnglish
- Archival historyThe former collection of the Kodak Museum was acquired by the National Science and Media Museum in 1990.
- Level of descriptionTOP
- Repository nameNational Science and Media Museum, Bradford
- Ilford Imaging LimitedBiographyBiographyThe history of Ilford Limited goes back to 1879 when Alfred Harman started business in a very modest way as one of the earliest manufacturers of photographic dry plates. his original "factory" was the basement of his own house in Cranbrook Road, Ilford, where his staff consisted of two men and three boys with assistance at busy times from his wife and his housekeeper. Harman marketed his plates through Marion & Co. Ltd., of Soho Square under the name of "Britannia" plates and demand was such that he very soon moved to a cottage on the Clyde Estate which became the emulsion-making department and a terrace of three-storeyed houses, facing the River Roding, which was converted into a plate-coating department and warehouse. By 1883 further expansion took place with the building of a "new factory" on the same site. In 1886 Harman, after a disagreement with Marion's, decided to make his own marketing arrangements and traded as the "Britannia Works Company". However, he was forced by a legal action to drop the name of "Britannia" for his plates and chose instead "Ilford". In view of its increasing success, the business was converted into a private limited liability company in 1891 and this in turn became, in 1898, a public company with a captial of £380,000, the first Chairman becoming the Earl of Crawford, K.T., F.R.S. In 1902 the name was changed from the Britannia Works Co. Ltd to Ilford Limited. In 1906, when Major-General Sir Ivor Phillips, K.C.B., D.S.O., became Chairman, Ilford Limited was still a relatively small business employing less than 300 people, but under his able leadership, the rate of expansion increased and by the gradual acquisition of other old-established photographic manufacturing businesses, the production capacity of several important units was added to that of the original factory. This amalgamation of interests was closely connected with the formation in 1919 of SELO Ltd, a company jointly owned by Ilford Limited, Thomas Illingworth and Co. Ltd., Imperial Dry Plate Co. Ltd., Rajar Ltd., Paget Prize Plate Co. Ltd., and Marion and Co. Ltd. This remarkable co-operative venture was started with the object of manufacturing roll films on behalf of all six participants, thus securing for each the economic benefits of large-scale output, and production began at Brentwood in 1922. In the meantime by 1918 Ilford Limited had acquired financial control of the Imperial Dry Plate Co. Ltd., established in 1892, and with it the Gem Dry Plate Co. Ltd., controlled by Imperial since 1912. Thomas Illingworth & Co. Ltd., founded in 1890 also came under Ilford control in 1919. Next, in 1928, came the absorption of Amalgamated Photographic Manufacturers Ltd., formed in 1920 by the combination of Rajar Ltd., Paget Prize Plate Co. Ltd., and Marin & Co. Ltd., the original distributing agents for Ilford products. In the 1920s the firm of Wellington & Ward Ltd. was also acquired. For a time, all these businesses maintained their separate identities, but during 1930/31, a complete reconstruction was undertaken and control became centralised in a single unified Ilford organisation. During the 1930s a number of distribution centres were set up in different parts of the country and factories or branches were established in five European countries and in India and Australia. During the next 30 years, Ilford's Mobberley site began to concentrate on the manufacture of photographic paper. The large rolls of paper were transported to the Essex factory for cutting, packing and distribution. In 1935 Ilford Ltd acquired an interest in Dufay-Chromex Ltd for whom it started to manufacture a reversal colour film of the additive type under the brand name Dufaycolor. Dufaycolor had previously (from 1932) been available in England only as 16mm & 9.5mm ciné film, but Ilford's expertise and finance enabled it to be marketed for still photography in 35mm, roll, sheet and film pack forms. Although processing was relatively simple (and instructions were published), Ilford offered a service for roll films. Ilford came under the control of the Ministry of Aircraft Production at the outbreak of war in 1939 and post-1945 it didn't resume an interest in additive colour (prior to WW2, Ilford had already started R&D into subtractive colour). In 1958 the company had frown to employ over 4,500 people in sites in the UK and abroad. The company was able to make all its own film base, i.e. the non-inflammable plastic on which the emulsions are coated. Before the war this film base had to be imported, either from America or Belgium, and meant expenditure of foreign currencies. 1959 saw ICI acquire a majority stake in Ilford Ltd. This was part of a cooperative deal with the Swiss firm Ciba AG to develop Ciba's dye-bleach print material for making prints from colour transparencies. In 1969 Ciba acquired all of ICI's shares in Ilford, becoming sole owner of Ilford Limited. 1969 also saw the introduction of Cibrachrome colour reversal printing paper and chemistry, a product developed by Ciba Geigy Photochemie of Switzerland, based on the silver-dye-bleach principle originally proposed in 1905 by the Austrian Karl Schnitzel. Over the following years it was further developed by Ciba and Ilford into a world renowned 'industry standard' product for high permanence richly saturated prints from transparencies. On 31st Dec 1969 Ilford ceased supply of the Ilfomatic 126 cameras and camera outfits, ending the sale of all Ilford's amateur camera products. In the 1980s Ilford returned to the world of colour films (which they abandoned at the start of 1969) with the re-introduction of an Ilfochrome colour slide film, named Ifochrome 100. The 'Ilford Contact' system was announced, facilitating 'contact' printing 35 mounted 35mm colour slides onto a single 10"x8" sheet of Cibachrome. The system consisted of two plastic frames, one holding 20 slides and the other holding 15, plus a base unit which held the printing paper and also correctly aligned the frames above the paper. The paper was exposed through each frame in turn, the rows of slides in the two frames being offset, such that slides in the second frame priinted into the gap in the rows of slides in the first frame. In 1983, UK headquarters were moved to Mobberley. In 1989 Ciba-Geigy sold the business to the International Paper Company, based in America. They merged Ilford with another of their acquisitions, graphic arts materials manufacturer Anitec, to become Ilford Anitec. In April 1996 Ilford announced it was moving its administration, sales and marketing from London to Mobberley, though technical services and the trade counter remained in London. The following year, Ilford Anitec was sold to Doughty Hanson Ltd, and the company was re-named as Ilford Imaging Ltd. On 24th August 2004, Ilford Imaging announced that it was going into administration. This was due to the fall in black and white photography caused by the increase in digital photography. The Swiss side of the business was put up for sale as a going concern. The UK company was saved from administration in 2005 by a management buy out, and continued to trade as Ilford Photo under a new company, Harman Technology Ltd. The company sells high-quality monochrome photographic products. In 2007, Harman Technology acquired Kentmere Photographic Limited, a Lake District-based manufacturer of photographic paper, and production is moved to Mobberley. The Kentmere brand-name was retained, and a range of cheaper products aimed at students and new users of black and white photography. Harman Technology was acquired by Pemberstone Ventures Limited was bought out on14 September 2015, ten years on from the original management buy out that rescued Ilford in the UK. The Swiss part of the company and the plant at Marly was bought by the Oji Paper Company of Japan in July 2005 and by Paradigm Global Partners LLP in May 2010. It produced high quality colour photographic and ink jet products under the name Ilford Imaging Switzerland GmbH before being declared bankrupt on 9 December 2013. Its brand name and trademarks were acquired by an Australian business, CR Kennedy & Company.
- Subject
- Conditions governing accessAccess is given in accordance with the NSMM access policy. Material from this collection is available to researchers through the museum’s Insight facility.
- Conditions governing ReproductionCopies may be supplied of items in the collection, provided that the copying process used does not damage the item or is not detrimental to its preservation. Copies will be supplied in accordance with the NSMM’s terms and conditions for the supply and reproduction of copies, and the provisions of any relevant copyright legislation.
- System of arrangementThis collection is currently undergoing processing and a system of arrangement has yet to be established. This field will be updated at a later date.
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