The Project Gutenberg EBook of Kodaks and Kodak Supplies, 1914, by
Canadian Kodak Company
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Title: Kodaks and Kodak Supplies, 1914
Author: Canadian Kodak Company
Release Date: July 16, 2010 [EBook #33183]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
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KODAKS
_and_
KODAK SUPPLIES
1914
CANADIAN KODAK CO., Limited
TORONTO, CANADA
"KODAK"
Is our registered and commonlaw trade mark and cannot be rightfully
applied except to goods of our manufacture. When a dealer tries to sell
you, under the Kodak name, a camera or films or other goods not of our
manufacture, you can be sure that he has an inferior article that he is
trying to market on the Kodak reputation, and he also makes himself
liable to suit by us for damages and injunction.
_If it isn't an Eastman, it isn't a Kodak_
KODAK SERVICE
Make it simpler.
From the very inception the Kodak Idea has been--make photography so
simple that anybody can take good pictures.
Simpler cameras, simpler processes have followed each other with almost
startling rapidity. But the Kodak Company has not been satisfied with
merely making mechanical and chemical improvements; it has assumed the
responsibility of educating people in picture taking. The very first
Kodak, way back in 1888, was accompanied by a so-called "manual" that
did more than merely explain the operation of the mechanical features of
the camera. It showed how the pictures should be taken, _how_ (and how
not) to photograph a tall building, how to photograph a small
child--told about the length of exposures in different kinds of light,
both in-doors and out. It was really a primary hand-book of photography.
From that day on, every piece of Kodak apparatus, every amateur product
of the Company has been accompanied by the most concise instructions,
instructions that were also constructive because they not only to
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