It also provides project production services including web design, marketing and technical writing.
For hundreds of years Inuit used a tool called a taqqut to fan the flames of their qulliq, the stone lamps that burn oil from rendered animal fat.
This tool, the taqqut, would become blackened with soot after fanning flames and could then be used to draw images and tell stories.
[5] Taqqut Productions announced via Twitter on 11 March 2019 that they were working on a second season of the show.
[6][non-primary source needed] In 2018 the Canada Media Fund announced that the Taqqut Productions project Arctic Horror Stories, produced in partnership with Colombia's Conexion Creativa, would recited $59,560 in funding.