Item is a watercolour sketch of a costume design for Dalhousie Theatre's 1986 production of Thieves' Carnival. The costume is for a character named Peterbono, dressed as a deck chair attendant. The sketch shows a male figure (disguised as a female figure) wearing the costume with balloons in the background. The sketch is cut out and mounted on a dark red matboard.
Item is a watercolour sketch of a costume design for Dalhousie Theatre's 1986 production of Thieves' Carnival. The costume is a sailor outfit for a character named Peterbono. The sketch shows a male figure wearing the costume with balloons in the background. The sketch is cut out and mounted on a dark red matboard.
Item is a watercolour sketch of a costume design for Dalhousie Theatre's 1986 production of Thieves' Carnival. The costume is for a character named Lord Edgard to wear in act II. The sketch shows a male figure wearing the costume with balloons in the background. The sketch is cut out and mounted on a dark red matboard. There is a second sketch underneath the first one, with a design for Lord Edgard's evening suit which was not used.
Item is a watercolour sketch of a costume design for Dalhousie Theatre's 1986 production of Thieves' Carnival. The costume is for a musician. The sketch shows a male figure wearing the costume and playing the clarinet with balloons in the background. The sketch is cut out and mounted on a dark red matboard.
Item is a watercolour sketch of a costume design for Dalhousie Theatre's 1986 production of Thieves' Carnival. The costume is for an unidentified woman with a stroller. The sketch shows a female figure wearing the costume and pushing a stroller with balloons in the background. The sketch is cut out and mounted on a dark red matboard.
Item is a pencil and watercolour sketch of a costume design for Dalhousie Theatre's 1992 production of The Trojan Women. The costume is for Poseidon and the sketch shows one male figure wearing the costume.
Item is a watercolour sketch of a costume design for Dalhousie Theatre's production of Twelfth Night. The costume is for a character named Sir Toby Belch. The sketch shows a male figure wearing the costume.
Item is a watercolour sketch of a costume design for Dalhousie Theatre's production of Twelfth Night. The costume is for a character named Valentine. The sketch shows a figure wearing the costume.
Item is a photocopy of a watercolour sketch of a costume design for Dalhousie Theatre's production of Twelfth Night. The costume is for two officers. The photocopy has some of Doyle's notes about the costume written on it.
Item is a watercolour sketch for "Democracy 250," the pre-show for the 2008 Nova Scotia Royal International Military Tattoo. The sketch shows several figures in historical dress re-enacting a street scene.
Photograph depicts Dr. Brenda Hattie (centre) signing a marriage certificate, flanked by (left to right) Reverend Darlene Young, Young's partner Mun Lei Kai, and the two unnamed Australian women who were married.
Item is a sheet with two drawings of the second floor of a building designed to serve as office and lecture spaces before being converted to a law library and eventually a university museum. One plan shows the space partitioned into a lecture hall, faculty room and offices to serve current needs; in the second it is laid out as a law library. There is also a small inset aerial perspective of the new (temporary) Arts Building in relation to the Science Building and Macdonald Library.
Item is map drawn by H.R. Theakston, University Engineer, showing Dalhousie and other associated buildings on and near both Studley Campus and Carleton Campus. The drawing includes a key indicating the names of both existing and proposed buildings. It was originally made on May 14, 1924 and revised on June 30, 1925.
Item is a site plan of Studley campus grounds, indicating the placement of roads and buildings. The drawing was produced by Mawson and Dunington-Grubb, Landscape Architects of Toronto. Written on the reverse: "Darling's layout of grounds."
Item is site plan for King's College, including an administration building, library and garage. The plan, which was drawn by Dalhousie's university engineer, H.R. Theakston, shows the proposed college site as facing out towards what is now Coburg Street, and includes a new avenue.
Item is a site plan for the University of King's College, indicating sewer and gas lines, an oval driveway and a diagonal avenue originating from the corner of Oxford Street and Coburg Road. The plan is signed by H.R. Theakston, Dalhousie's university engineer.
Item is a 1930 presentation drawing by architect Andrew Cobb of the first floor plan for an arts building at Dalhousie that was planned but never built. This version includes a women's cloakroom, five lecture rooms, a faculty room and two studies.
Item is a 1932 presentation drawing by architect Andrew Cobb of the second floor plan for an arts building at Dalhousie that was planned but never built. This version includes seven lecture rooms, a dean's office and five studies.
Item is a 1930 presentation drawing by architect Andrew Cobb of the fourth floor plan for an arts building at Dalhousie that was planned but never built. This version includes the upper part of the third-floor lecture and arts rooms, two laboratories, six studies and an undesignated room. A note on the plans indicates that the corridor to the studies was waiting for the steel trusses design.
Item is a 1932 presentation drawing by architect Andrew Cobb of the fourth floor plan for an arts building at Dalhousie that was planned but never built. This version includes the upper part of a third-floor lecture hall, two laboratories and six studies.
Item is a presentation drawing created by Drew Sperry of the site plan for a proposed YMCA for Halifax, which was Sperry's terminal design project for his Bachelor of Architecture degree at the Nova Scotia Technical College.
Item is a presentation drawing created by Drew Sperry of the first floor plan of a proposed YMCA for Halifax, which was Sperry's terminal design project for his Bachelor of Architecture degree at the Nova Scotia Technical College.
Item is a presentation drawing created by Drew Sperry of a section perspective for a proposed YMCA for Halifax, which was Sperry's terminal design project for his Bachelor of Architecture degree at the Nova Scotia Technical College.