Eclectic doesn't even begin to describe! $5.00 gets an adult in the door so it's a super affordable outing for a family. The Museum of Photography is contained within the Rossignol Cultural Centre - which may account for some of the quirky oddness here. Example: a room devoted to Outhouses. yes. The staff member - an irrepressibly cheerful young lady - popped her head in, pointed upwards and said, by the way - that is Sherman Hines' actual toilet. Since his darkroom was in his toilet he ended up spending a LOT of time in there. We started to giggle but then she followed that with: Hey, wanna see a hippo jaw? and she reached for a box stuffed with newspaper; ta dah - hippo jaw. Look, she said, it has a loose tooth. and she giggled. At that moment for me, she became an Anne (of Green Gables). The building itself is architecturally interesting - and as lovely as it is - it seems too small to hold all the items in the collection, so many are displayed without identification / information and so many more are just stuffed in random boxes tucked here and there. I walked past a large narrow "table" about four times before someone pointed out that it was in fact part of camera. yes. We went through a trapper's cabin (???) and suddenly we were in a room full of taxidermy animals. A huge giraffe was right in front of us. "Anne" popped in and said - that giraffe is 18 feet tall and Sherman Hines shot it himself as part of a cull. Then she popped out and bounded back in and said, the polar bear is nine feet tall - and she was gone. I was thinking ... POLAR BEAR ...? but a little further in we saw it. There are some amazing artefacts, some photographs that just take your breath away - one picture we found was of the Bluenose, THE Bluenose - racing. It was taken in the 1930's and it's the best picture I've seen of that iconic ship. The Trudeau family photo, Pierre, Margaret and the three little boys is just around the corner from a black & white portrait of Mick Jagger. Coincidence? I'll leave it to you. At some point Sherman was in Mongolia, which might explain the Yurt out in the yard. ... as I said, Eclectic doesn't even begin describe! :) :)