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19 Search Results:
The chicken feeder presented during a 1948 episode of the British Broadcasting Corporation television show The Inventors’ Club. Anon., “Sciences et voyages – La télévision permet aux inventeurs anglais de faire connaître leurs inventions au grand public.” Photo-Journal, 7 October 1948, 8.
Article
Engineering & Technology
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Inventing is 1% inspiration, 99% perspiration and 10% television

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Rénald Fortier
Ingenium – Canada's…
Oct 30, 2018
Hello there, my reading friend. Television is undoubtedly one of the great inventions of the 20th century. It is the best of things, it is the worst of things, if I may paraphrase Charles John Huffam Dickens. Would you care to accompany me down memory lane to look at one of the best television show you have never heard of, a story brought to you by a photo found in the 7 October 1948 issue of Photo-Journal, a weekly newspaper published in Montréal, Québec? Once upon a time, around September 1947
A poster for the movie From the Earth to the Moon
Article
Photography and Film
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Jules Gabriel Verne would not have been amused: From the Earth to the Moon

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Rénald Fortier
Ingenium – Canada's…
Nov 27, 2018
May I begin this article by offering you my most sincere salutations, my reading frfiend? I am very pleased indeed to be with you again. If yours truly may paraphrase the title of a rather popular 1991 song by the American hip hop trio Salt-n-Pepa, let’s talk about space. More specifically, let’s talk about a forgotten space movie whose premiere occurred 60 years ago this month, in other words in November 1958. From the Earth to the Moon was an adaptation of a well known novel, From the Earth to
Ken Molson sitting on a dock near a seaplane
4 m
Article
Aviation
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Ken Molson's photographs detail Canada's aviation history

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Adele Torrance
Ingenium
Apr 4, 2019
In honour of Archives Awareness Week (April 1-7), Ingenium is highlighting a few gems taken from our digital collection. Was Ken Molson born with the dream of flying? Or did he acquire the taste, little by little, just as he collected photographs on aviation themes, little by little, over his lifetime? Ken Molson’s personal archives were donated to the Canada Aviation and Space Museum in 1996 and were later certified as Canadian cultural property. The archives cover the entire history of
The First Low-Priced, Mass Produced Camera
Article
Photography and Film
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The First Low-Priced, Mass Produced Camera

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Ingenium – Canada's Museums of Science and Innovation
Mar 8, 2016
When the Eastman Kodak Company launched the Brownie camera in 1900, it used a group of fictional sprites called Brownies to increase the camera’s consumer appeal, especially among children. Canadian illustrator Palmer Cox (1840–1924) drew on Scottish folklore to create the Brownies, describing their adventures in more than a dozen books between 1887 and 1925. Cox, who was born in Granby, Quebec, increased his substantial income by licensing the Brownie characters for commercial use. Decades
View along the rail line, Fergus, Ontario, ca. 1886–1887. Source: Library and Archives Canada/e010865831
Article
Arts & Design
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Panorama Camera

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Library and Archives Canada
Nov 12, 2015
In 1888, Canadian photographer John R. Connon patented a panoramic camera—perhaps Canada’s most significant contribution to the field of photography. Although there were European patents for panoramic cameras from as early as 1843, most photographers continued to splice together multiple exposures to capture wide landscapes on film. Connon’s camera was mounted on a rotating platform and could capture images as wide as 360 degrees in a single exposure. Uniquely, Connon’s patent specified the use
A white and blue space shuttle leaves the Earth’s atmosphere and is pointing upwards to the words “The IMAX Experience.”  The image background is black, the text is white, and we can see a blue ocean with some white clouds in the Earth at the bottom of the picture.
4 m
Article
Communications
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IMAX influencer: How one woman’s work impacted the big screen

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Leo Joy-Clark
Mar 19, 2020
You’ve probably never stopped to think about the complex technical requirements and hard-working people who came together to make IMAX a reality.
A small metal and glass prism and its old brown storage box sit on a white background. A Kodak color strip sits in front of the artifacts.
7 m
Article
Conservation
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The science of artifact conservation: A prism and its leather case

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Caitlin Walsh
Ingenium - Canada's Museums of Science and Innovation
Jun 23, 2020
Dive into the process of a conservation treatment of a prism and its leather case.
A variety of audio-visual formats, including film, audio, and different kinds of video cassettes, from the Les Harris Fonds are spread out on a table.
5 m
Article
Aviation
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View from above: Capturing the experience of flight on film

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Adele Torrance
Ingenium
Oct 25, 2021
How do filmmakers capture the experience of flight on film? Read about one filmmaker’s strategies.
A black and white photograph of approximately 10 airplanes under construction in a large factory. Two workers are visible in the foreground.
Article
Aviation
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The Avro Lancaster: Beyond the Second World War

A portrait of Valerie smiling in a yellow sweater in front of a blurred background.
Valerie Kaiyang Wood
Ingenium – Canada's Museums of Science and Innovation
Jul 12, 2022
The Avro Lancaster was a large British bomber airplane, manufactured by A.V. Roe and Company (Avro), that entered the Second World War in April 1942 and was best known for nighttime bombings of German cities. It was one of the first British bombers to feature four engines, which allowed it to carry a very large bombing load, more than 6,000 kg, as well as enough fuel to fly more than 2,600 km in a single flight. The Lancaster could reach speeds of 438 km per hour and had a high-altitude ceiling
A spliced, three-part image depicts a green-and-red plastic gadget attached to a cow’s tail, a composite image showing hundreds of meteors, and a close-up of a pair of glasses sitting on top of an open book.
13 m
Article
Agriculture
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3 things you should know about tech-enabled cows, meteors, and presbyopia

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Cassandra Marion, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Jan 14, 2022
For the January edition, we explain new technology which is making cow births safer, an international citizen science initiative for monitoring meteors, and how a new eye drop is improving vision for the middle-aged consumer.
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