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- Magazine, Emigre No. 13, "Redesigning Stereotypes," 1989 - Emigre is a digital type foundry established by Rudy VanderLans and Zuzana Licko. The company's history is linked with the introduction of the 1984 Macintosh computer, used to design their early bitmapped typefaces. Emigre's digital work gained notoriety -- defying visual communication standards with fractured, layered combinations of text and image. <em>Emigre</em> magazine showcased their fonts and promoted groundbreaking designers.

- 1989
- Collections - Artifact
Magazine, Emigre No. 13, "Redesigning Stereotypes," 1989
Emigre is a digital type foundry established by Rudy VanderLans and Zuzana Licko. The company's history is linked with the introduction of the 1984 Macintosh computer, used to design their early bitmapped typefaces. Emigre's digital work gained notoriety -- defying visual communication standards with fractured, layered combinations of text and image. Emigre magazine showcased their fonts and promoted groundbreaking designers.
- Ford Motor Company Branch in Berlin, Germany, April 26, 1926 - Ford Motor Company operated sales and service branches in cities around the world. This photograph shows the company's branch in Berlin, Germany. Ford's first German branch opened in Hamburg in 1912. The automaker established its Berlin office in 1924. Ford began assembling Model T cars in Berlin, from imported parts, in 1926.

- April 26, 1926
- Collections - Artifact
Ford Motor Company Branch in Berlin, Germany, April 26, 1926
Ford Motor Company operated sales and service branches in cities around the world. This photograph shows the company's branch in Berlin, Germany. Ford's first German branch opened in Hamburg in 1912. The automaker established its Berlin office in 1924. Ford began assembling Model T cars in Berlin, from imported parts, in 1926.
- Portrait of Sigmund Bergmann, 1927 -

- 1927
- Collections - Artifact
Portrait of Sigmund Bergmann, 1927
- Aerial View of Ford Motor Company Branch in Berlin, Germany, January 1926 - Ford Motor Company operated sales and service branches in cities around the world. This photograph shows the company's branch in Berlin, Germany. Ford's first German branch opened in Hamburg in 1912. The automaker established its Berlin office in 1924. Ford began assembling Model T cars in Berlin, from imported parts, in 1926.

- January 04, 1926
- Collections - Artifact
Aerial View of Ford Motor Company Branch in Berlin, Germany, January 1926
Ford Motor Company operated sales and service branches in cities around the world. This photograph shows the company's branch in Berlin, Germany. Ford's first German branch opened in Hamburg in 1912. The automaker established its Berlin office in 1924. Ford began assembling Model T cars in Berlin, from imported parts, in 1926.
- Orville Wright Explains the Airplane to a Group in the Hangar at Templehof, Germany, 1909 -

- 1909
- Collections - Artifact
Orville Wright Explains the Airplane to a Group in the Hangar at Templehof, Germany, 1909
- The House of Heinz, circa 1929 - The H.J. Heinz Company was founded from humble beginnings in 1869. By the turn of the century it had become a well-known manufacturer of processed food. Its rapid success resulted in the expansion of its operations at home and abroad. This booklet from 1929 provides an overview of the many branch factories and buildings operated by the company, referred to as "The House of Heinz."

- circa 1929
- Collections - Artifact
The House of Heinz, circa 1929
The H.J. Heinz Company was founded from humble beginnings in 1869. By the turn of the century it had become a well-known manufacturer of processed food. Its rapid success resulted in the expansion of its operations at home and abroad. This booklet from 1929 provides an overview of the many branch factories and buildings operated by the company, referred to as "The House of Heinz."
- "Berlin and Its Environs," -

- Collections - Artifact
"Berlin and Its Environs,"
- Wheeling the Wright Airplane to the Starting Derrick, Preparing for a Flight, Tempelhof, Germany, 1909 -

- 1909
- Collections - Artifact
Wheeling the Wright Airplane to the Starting Derrick, Preparing for a Flight, Tempelhof, Germany, 1909
- Sigmund Bergmann and Thomas A. Edison, Berlin, Germany, 1911 -

- 1911
- Collections - Artifact
Sigmund Bergmann and Thomas A. Edison, Berlin, Germany, 1911
- "Berlin," a Souvenir Book from the 1936 Summer Olympics - German National Socialist propaganda permeates this 1936 Berlin Olympic Games travel guide. The guide expounds the rise of a New Germany with glowing images of the city, but it belies the ethnic and racial hatred underpinning the Nazi regime. Adolf Hitler hoped the games would demonstrate "Aryan" racial superiority. Athletes like U.S. track star Jesse Owens, who won four gold medals in 1936, disproved him.

- 1936
- Collections - Artifact
"Berlin," a Souvenir Book from the 1936 Summer Olympics
German National Socialist propaganda permeates this 1936 Berlin Olympic Games travel guide. The guide expounds the rise of a New Germany with glowing images of the city, but it belies the ethnic and racial hatred underpinning the Nazi regime. Adolf Hitler hoped the games would demonstrate "Aryan" racial superiority. Athletes like U.S. track star Jesse Owens, who won four gold medals in 1936, disproved him.