Sunday, 3 July 2022

Associated Screen News Limited: Montreal to Eastman Kodak Company, Rochester

Date of use : 1935, Canada

Associated Screen News Limited: Montreal to Eastman Kodak Company, Rochester

This commercial envelope mailed from Montreal represents a piece of correspondence associated with Associated Screen News Limited, a Canadian company involved in the production of newsreels and cinematic visual material. The printed letterhead visible on the left side of the envelope clearly identifies the company and its Montreal location at Western Avenue and Decarie Boulevard. The circular postal cancellation indicates that the item was processed in Montreal on 15 October 1935 during the evening postal dispatch. The envelope was addressed to the Eastman Kodak Company in Rochester, New York, suggesting that the document formed part of a professional exchange between two organizations connected to the photographic and motion picture industries.
Associated Screen News Limited operated as an important producer of newsreels and visual media in Canada. Companies of this type specialized in filming current events, documentary scenes, and short informational films that were distributed to cinemas for public exhibition. Newsreels were widely shown in theaters before feature films and played a significant role in the visual dissemination of news during the early decades of modern cinema. Montreal served as a major center for film production and distribution within Canada, and firms such as Associated Screen News contributed to the development of the country's cinematic infrastructure. In addition to filming activities, such companies frequently maintained laboratory facilities and technical production services related to film processing.
The recipient, the Eastman Kodak Company, was one of the most influential manufacturers of photographic and motion picture materials. Founded by George Eastman, the company developed and produced photographic film, motion picture film stock, and a wide range of imaging technologies. Its headquarters and manufacturing facilities in Rochester became internationally recognized centers for research, innovation, and industrial production in photography and cinema. Because motion picture production relied heavily on high-quality film materials, film producers and newsreel companies commonly maintained commercial relationships with Kodak. The correspondence represented by this envelope may therefore have concerned film stock supply, laboratory materials, or technical cooperation related to motion picture production.
Record Information
Title: Associated Screen News Limited Business Envelope (Montreal to Rochester)
Category: Motion Picture Industry History / Commercial Correspondence
Subcategory: Canadian Newsreel Production / Film Supply Networks
Country: Canada (Sender: Montreal) → United States (Recipient: Rochester, NY)
City: Montreal, Quebec (Sender: Associated Screen News Limited) → Rochester, New York (Recipient: Eastman Kodak Company)
Date of use: 15 October 1935
Company (Sender): Associated Screen News Limited, Western Avenue and Decarie Boulevard, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. A Canadian newsreel and motion picture production company active in the 1930s, specializing in filming current events, documentaries, and informational films for cinema distribution.
Object Type: Commercial envelope (business correspondence)
Postal Features: Canadian postage stamps; Montreal postal cancellation (15 October 1935, evening dispatch).
Language: English
Material: Paper envelope
Dimensions: Standard commercial envelope format
Collection Theme: Associated Screen News, Montreal film industry, Canadian cinema, newsreel production, Eastman Kodak Company, Rochester photographic manufacturing, motion picture film stock, Canada-US trade, 1930s postal history, film production correspondence.
Archival Significance: This 1935 envelope documents commercial correspondence between a Canadian newsreel producer (Associated Screen News Limited) and the Eastman Kodak Company, illustrating the industrial supply networks that supported motion picture production in North America during the 1930s.
Research Note:
This article is based on historical research and independent analysis of the material in the author's collection. The text has been prepared as an original interpretative study and does not reproduce copyrighted material.
This item is documented as part of the Photography in Postal History research project.
For research context, see the Research Methodology.
For academic reference, please refer to How to Cite This Archive.

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