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- When Kodak Came to China: Photography, Amateurs, and Visual . . .
My dissertation examines how amateur photography emerged and developed in China from 1900 to 1937, and how the photographic societies, exhibitions and publications opened new avenues of photographic expression after six decades of problematic colonial photography
- The search for photos of Chinas past: Kodak Talk Forum . . .
China's photographic record begins only in the 1970s because nearly all earlier pictures were destroyed The ones that survived are mostly outside China, and a major effort is now under way to bring them together online, says the BBC's Mary Ward-Lowery
- The Kodak comes to Peking | Visualising China
Whilst we cannot be sure, it is possible that that this enthusiasm had been prompted by the arrival of ‘the Kodak’, the camera which George Eastman had brought onto the market in August the previous year, accompanied by the slogan ‘You press the button, we do the rest’
- Blast from the Past: Photos Captured 125 Years Ago with the . . .
And thanks to the National Media Museum, we now have a small gallery of sample photographs that show what photos taken 125 years ago with the Kodak No 1 looked like
- Photography | Kodak
One unique form of publicity, introduced in 1950, was the long-running series of KODAK COLORAMA Display transparencies Overlooking the main terminal floor of Grand Central Station in New York City, the 18-foot-high by 60-foot-wide displays were viewed by an estimated 650,000 commuters and tourists every business day until the exhibit was
- The Impact of Kodak Cameras in China: A Historical Overview
This guide delves into the fascinating history and impact of Kodak cameras in China, a country that has embraced photography as both an art form and a means of documentation
- Early Photos by Kodak From the Late 19th Century ~ Vintage . . .
To accompany the trademarked name, Eastman developed and released a Kodak camera which was loaded with paper film of 100 photos And so was born the amateur photograph
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