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#1
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Thx u in advance
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#2
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i bet google knows
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#3
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Which version?
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#4
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Kodak has been producing photo supplies from the early 1900s…. If you could post a pic I could help date the paper
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Agreeed we need more info and hopefully we can help
As a point of reference their first camera was in 1888
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Thanks all Jeff Kuhr https://www.flickr.com/photos/144250058@N05/ Looking for 1920 Heading Home Ruth Cards 1917-20 Felix Mendelssohn Babe Ruth 1921 Frederick Foto Ruth Rare early Ruth Cards and Postcards 1910 Old Mills Joe Jackson 1914 Boston Garter Joe Jackson 1915 Cracker Jack Joe Jackson 1911 Pinkerton Joe Jackson |
#6
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I'm guessing he's referring to the Kodak logo being visible on the back of the photo paper.
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#7
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If the question is about commercial paper there is still no definitive answer. The repetitive logo at an angle on the back is most likely 1990's. However, they also made paper for smaller prints that had a single logo with the date printed. These papers were mainly for commercial labs that printed for the consumers or other customers. Newspapers and other organizations used Kodak paper, but it did not have those logos. I was still buying Kodak paper in the 1990's, most RC polycontrast, by the box of 100 sheets for my own darkroom printing. That paper had no logos, yet it was Kodak paper.
Here is some information from the film and darkroom forum based in the U.K. Excerpted From: https://www.researchgate.net/publica...ographic_paper Notes on dating photographic paper January 2005 Project: Silver gelatin characterization Authors: Paul Messier Yale University 2.3 Back Printing In some cases manufacturers applied inked logos and other information on the reverse of their papers. Though there are some exceptions, back printing is consistently used only on Agfa papers and on the longstanding Velox brand produced by Eastman Kodak. While some superficial differences are evident in the typefaces, size and positioning of the Kodak back printing it is uncertain how much value these observation have when it comes to dating photographs. This author is just starting a methodical chronology of Velox and other back printing on Kodak papers and any useful results from this exercise might be a year or two away. A preliminary finding is that the single word “Velox” with no other graphic embellishments was used to mark papers manufactured in the United States dating from the late 1920’s to the late 1940’s. After Topics in Photographic Preservation, Volume Eleven (2005) 125 1950 or so, back printing on Velox stacked the words “Kodak / Velox / Paper.” The three stacked words were used at least until the mid 1960’s. Another finding is that Kodak papers manufactured in England, and probably elsewhere, had completely different typefaces and back printing styles. The Agfa company was much more consistent in its use of back printing. While not every paper in the Agfa line carries back printing many do. When present, Agfa’s markings can sometimes be used to establish a rough date of production. (Agfa-Gevaert, 1997; Auer, 1999). Prior to the late 1950’s, Agfa identified its papers using two words comprising the manufacturer name and the brand name such as “Agfa Brovira,” “Agfa Portriga,” “Agfa Lupex” etc. Following the late 1950’s use of the brand name was dropped, leaving the one word “Agfa.” Aside from dropping the brand name in the late 1950’s, Agfa changed typefaces, added and subtracted quality control markers and other graphic elements over time. A chronological compilation of this information would be a tremendously useful, though the author knows of no such resource. On the whole, the use of back printing for dating papers is of limited use since comparatively few papers show any manufacturer applied markings. Though relatively rare given the entire population of photographic papers it is a remarkable fact that many of the questioned photographs attributed to Man Ray and Lewis Hine, purportedly made in the first part of the 20th century, were found to contain the one word “Agfa” marking on the reverse clearly indicating the papers were manufactured after the late 1950’s. [End Excerpt] The full text is available at the link at the start of this post. Oh, and on a side note, Kodak stopped producing black and white paper in 2005.
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