Omnibus - William Kapell at the piano
e) William Kapell at the piano - 13 mins walking down the hall through the Museum's music dept. playing of oldest piano by Dr. Winternitz, curator of the dept. Interview talks about the piano being closer to harpsichord and discusses about the tones. Winternitz displays how the piano works to produce sound. - then goes on to William Kapell concert in the Museum's music dept. playing Sonata - see the various instruments on display in the music dept. He plays other sonatas as well. Scott Paper Company commercial - all about Scott paper towels - great shot of woman putting sandwich on table, slicing tomatoes, frying bacon and putting on paper towels to soak up grease., paper towels wiping out frying pan, wetting paper towel under water and washing the sink. Woman pulling paper towels off wall in bathroom and drying hands. Man oiling saw in the garage and drying greasy hands with paper towels.
News Clip: Recycle
Video footage from the KXAS-TV/NBC station in Fort Worth, Texas, to accompany a news story.
Bundling Reams Of Paper
Reams of paper being created from rolls going into the paper cutting machine to the cut paper coming off in stacks and rolling down the conveyor belt in packages. Also shots of cases of paper on a conveyor belt.
Pathe
Boy Scouts salvaging paper on Paper Holiday in Peoria, IL, for war effort during World War II
CONVENTIONAL WISDOM / THE IDEA OF THE PAPERLESS OFFICE
B ROLL OF RETAIL OFFICE SUPPLIES STORE OFFICE DEPOT AND SUS FOR A BETSY STARK CS VO ON INCREASED PAPER SALES EVEN AS COMPUTERS BECOME MORE PROMINENT / PAPERLESS OFFICE 2:00:36 WS EXT OFFICE DEPOT 2:00:45 TIGHT SHOT / EXT OFFICE DEPOT 2:01:13 CUSTOMERS WALKING INTO OFFICE DEPOT 2:02:20 PAN PAPER AISLE 2:02:31 TILT UP STACK OF PAPER 2:02:42 WS WOMAN TAKES PAPER 2:02:43 REAR VIEW / WOMAN W/ PAPER IN HAND 2:03:28 FINE BUSINESS PAPERS 2:03:40 DESIGN PAPERS / DIFFERENT STYLES 2:04:07 INKJET PAPERS / COLOR COPY PAPERS 2:04:11 COLOR COPY PAPERS 2:04:27 HEAVY WEIGHT PAPERS 2:04:47 PAN PAPERS 2:04:58 TIGHT SHOT / DIFFERENT PACKS OF PAPERS 2:05:18 TILT UP PAPERS 2:05:40 PAN PAPERS 2:05:49 QUICK PAN PAPERS 2:06:03 PAN PINK AND BLUE PAPERS 2:06:19 ROLLING SHOT PAPERS / DOWN AND AROUND CORNER 2:08:41 BETSY STARK SU
1966
b&w - industrial short - I.B.M. promo - low angle construction crane - factory - smelter - oil refinery - exterior paper mill - interior tracking paper rollers - giant rolls of paper - roll of paper lifted by mechanical arm over other rolls of paper - paper making - International Business Machines
ART
PAPER AIRPLANE FLYING. GETS STUCK IN FENCE. CHILDREN FOLDING DECORATIVE PAPER. LARGE PAPER MASKS. STAPLER. TAPE. PAPER SHARK. PAPER HATS. ORIGAMI. ORIENTAL CHILDREN. BLACK CHILDREN. CUTTING & PASTING PICTURES FROM MAGAZINES. PARTY. INSTRUCTIONAL PAPER FISH. PAPER STAR. HANDS FOLDING PAPER. PAPER FLOWER, PEACOCK.
SNAPSHOTS
People take photos (1800s, reenactments), People take photos (modern day), Classroom, Two women at work, Photo exhibit, Girls in garden, Man and wife in suburban home, Photo store, Snapshots scanned, CU Kodak paper, Forest (aerial), City and factory (aerial), Chemical testing lab, Geeky man puts roller over paper, Papers splash into vat of water, Papers spin in whirlpool, Huge paper machine, Master Control room, Five mile long sheets of paper, Water sprays, Paper comes off roller, Rolls spin, Man cuts huge paper roll, Paper stamped (bursting test), Paper tested, Paper rolls over #s 3,4,5,6, Paper washed, Paper moves up rack, Men at paper machines, Full rolls of paper, Colored liquids bubble in test tubes, Gelatin poured into vat of water, Man work in emulsion making room, Paper coated on machine, Man looks over coated paper, Machine plots curves, Colored liquids flow in to container, Scientific machine, Man sprays liquid onto paper, Paper is cut, rolled and packaged, Photographs roll over, Printing machines, Man hands snapshot over, Boy looks over photos
Kap sur l'avenir
Interior, Spruce Falls Inc pulp and paper mill; MLS in aisles of paper recycling warehouse, forklift moves bundles of paper.
Tribute to Aboubakar Cissé killed in a mosque of the Gard - Paris, 01/05/2025
Paper chromatography of inks
Paper chromatography of inks, timelapse footage. Paper chromatography is a technique in which a substance is separated out into its constituent parts as it dissolves in a solvent and spreads along the paper. Different pigments in the inks are carried a different distance by the solvent, as they travel at different rates. Seven inks were used here, from top to bottom: light green, dark green, dark brown, black, orange, light brown and red. The chromatography reveals that there are five separate pigments used to make up the different colours in this range of inks. The black ink contains them all, and the others contain a combination of some of them. The solvent was 1% salt solution in water. The run time was three hours.
1960s: Man with an embroidered jacket pretends to sign a paper with a quill. He hands the paper back. He receives another paper with a seal.
1960s: Man with an embroidered jacket pretends to sign a paper with a quill. He hands the paper back. He receives another paper with a seal.
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PAPER PRODUCTS
00:00:00:00 VS paper mftg machines,huge rolls of paper, pkgs of toilet paper on convezor (0:00)/
THROWAWAY LINES (aka PAPER CROCKERY)
Dunstable, Bedfordshire. <br/> <br/>M/S of four people sitting around a dinner table with various pieces of paper crockery before them; one of the women stands up and gathers up the paper tablecloth and crockery; she puts the whole lot into a bin in the kitchen. <br/> <br/>We then see several shots of paper doilies and fairy cake cups being made; sheets of printed, patterned paper comes through huge rollers. A group of people sit around a table and discuss the pattern of paper plates; a designer works on a rosebud pattern; various shots of paper plates being made and coming off rollers in the factory. Paper cups are made on the machines. <br/> <br/>Several good shots of food being served out by dinner ladies; fruit cocktail goes into paper bowls; fish and chips onto paper plates. A couple sit at a table and eat with disposable crockery and cutlery from a check paper tablecloth. <br/> <br/>Note: one of the factory workers seems to have a logo reading 'Cross Paperware' on her overalls.
Demonstration of flights of paper airplanes during the first International Paper Airplane contest in New York City.
The first International Paper Airplane contest in New York City. Paper airplanes displayed on a table. A man demonstrates flights of various types of paper airplanes. Judges at a table. Location: New York City USA. Date: February 28, 1967.
56834 1950s PULP & PAPER INDUSTRY IN GEORGIA PINE PACKS A PUNCH MEAD CORPORATION
Presented by the Mead Atlanta Paper Company, Inc., PINE PACKS A PUNCH is a short film on the company’s operations in Georgia, which includes some emphasis on soil conservation. Produced by Robert M. Carson, this film shows the role the company (and Georgia’s timber industry) plays in the packaging industry. The film begins by discussing how agriculture has historically played a central role in Georgia’s economy, but the reliance on only a few crops—namely cotton—led to soil depletion and erosion. The barren land hit a breaking point during the 1930s, so Georgia began an initiative—the planting of native Georgia pine trees to solve the soil erosion and depletion problems. This initiative was primarily undertaken by the state’s pulp and paper industry. Restoration efforts were successful because of the quick growth of the pine trees native to Georgia; today, small tree farm operations (03:52) are providing the timber needed to fuel the demand for paper products throughout the country. Harvested pine is sent to mills like the Brunswick Pulp and Paper Company’s plant (04:22). Most of the pulpwood is supplied by private land owners and delivered to the mills by small independent truckers. Pine from more distant locations is brought in by rail. Plants like Brunswick’s turn timber into paper by using heavy duty cranes to load logs onto conveyer belts to be debarked (04:54). Logs drop into debarking drums (05:34) where the bark is stripped; the peeled logs move to chippers before being “cooked” (06:28), washed and screened (06:37), then made into pulp (06:47). Water is evaporated from the sheets of pulp, which is then trimmed and sheeted (07:40). Stacked sheets are weighed and loaded onto trucks, and sent off to be made into a variety of paper products. An aerial shot of the modern Rome Kraft Company mill (08:11) shows where Georgia Pine is manufactured into liner board, or Kraft paper board. Here, one of the world’s largest paper-making machines, the Conqueror (08:35), makes Kraft paper board at a rapid pace. At this mill, 12-ton Kraft board rolls are made (09:12), then cut into smaller rolls and loaded onto trucks for transportation. One of the world’s largest users of Kraft paper board is the Mead Atlanta Paper Company (10:58). Much of the packaging industry’s products is produced in Georgia, specifically by the Mead Atlanta Paper Company. Kraft paper is stored in mass (12:41) at the company’s modern packaging plant. Giant equipment moves the rolls of Kraft paper to production lines (13:10), where they are fed into a corrugator (13:40). Corrugated board is cut, printed, and scoured (14:17). The folder-tapper machine (14:50) folds and tapes or glues sheets, producing boxes ready to meet the needs of the merchant. The packaging industry doesn’t just produce cardboard packaging; the work of graphic artists and engineers contribute to new structures and artistic designs, impacting advertising and delivery of products. At the Mead Atlanta Paper Company, the cluster pack and bottle master carton are developed for advanced packaging of glass bottles, cans, and other items (17:38). The Mercury press (20:00) produces bottle-master carry-home cartons in bulk. Different printing machines produce specific packaging, such as the printers that di-cut cartons. Machines print colored graphics and product descriptions on the packaging, as well as producing complex folds. At the Mead laboratory (22:30), engineers and testing experts constantly test the designs of packages to ensure they hold up and meet merchant and consumer expectations. Companies like the Mead Atlanta Paper Company also provide their customers with other packaging services, such as the machines that wrap cartons around canned products—in this case, Libby’s Tomato Juice Handi-6 Pak (23:15). The film then shows Coca-Cola cartons being produced (24:08) then filled with bottles of Coca-Cola on the automation line. The film concludes by discussing how packaging helps merchants, such as grocery stores, price and stock products. Merchandising and packaging are regularly reinvented to continue to appeal to the consumer, all of which is part of the packaging industry.<p><p><p>We encourage viewers to add comments and, especially, to provide additional information about our videos by adding a comment! See something interesting? Tell people what it is and what they can see by writing something for example: "01:00:12:00 -- President Roosevelt is seen meeting with Winston Churchill at the Quebec Conference."<p><p>This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD, 2k and 4k. For more information visit http://www.PeriscopeFilm.com
Food colouring chromatography
Paper chromatography of artificial food colourings, timelapse footage. Paper chromatography is a technique in which a substance is separated out into its constituent parts as it dissolves in a solvent and spreads along the paper. Different pigments in the colourings are carried a different distance by the solvent, as they travel at different rates. Five colourings were used here, from top to bottom: red, green, blue, yellow and black. The chromatography reveals that there are several separate pigments used to make up the different colours, each marked with a moving label. These are, from left to right, E122 (Azorubine, or Carmoisine), E129 (Allura Red), E104 (Quinoline Yellow), E124 (Ponceau 4R), E142 (Green S) and E133 (Brilliant Blue FCF). The solvent was water and the run time was three hours.
1960s: Jar by photo paper, hands draw on paper with dropper.
1960s: Jar by photo paper, hands draw on paper with dropper.
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