14 Kasım 2011 Pazartesi

Robots Sculptures by Gordon Bennett

Honeywell

robots

 

Big Beam

robots

 

Tridar

robots

 

Foster

robots

 

Kenmore 3

robots

 

Adlake Kero

robots

 

Simplex 3

robots

 

Zero

robots

 

Ms. Jello

robots

 

Thermo King

robots

 

Brownie 2

robots

 

Johnson

robots

 

Cryenco

robots

 

Hickok

robots

 

Betty

robots

 

Mike

robots

 

Explore King

robots

 

Detecto 3

robots

 

Eolin

robots

 

Revere

robots

Posted via email from muratgulmez

16 Mart 2011 Çarşamba

The Ghosts of Art Deco – Tube Radios

The Ghosts of Art Deco – Tube Radios

Zenith 12-A-58

Nothing more perfectly embodied pre-war America’s dual obsessions with Art Deco and consumer electronics than the tube radio.

Yes, even in the 1930s Americans loved their gadgets…

Tales of American families huddled around the radio listening to Al Jolson singing or Edward R. Murrow reporting from strife-torn Europe are ingrained in the American psyche (or at least they used to be), and back then the radio was the centerpiece of living rooms across the country and around the world.

Radios were immensely popular consumer goods in ‘20s – ‘40s, with dozens of companies producing all manner of radios to quench America’s thirst for what was then high-tech home entertainment.

It’s probably worth saying that radios were the flat screen TVs of their time, and while I doubt people were trampling each other to death in a rush to buy radios like they do flat screen TVs today, there is no question that in their heyday radios were highly sought after status symbols as well as being groundbreaking electronic marvels.

The Art Deco era heralded a boom in home electronics as it brought new designs and materials to radio manufacturing. Where early radios would have been primarily made of wood, man-made materials such as plastic, chrome and aluminum were incorporated into Deco design.

The use of plastic in particular allowed the inexpensive, mass production of radios, and in shapes and colors previously unattainable.

Molded resins like Bakelite, Plaskon, Catalin, and Beetle became extremely popular and were often dyed and colored with wonderful swirls or marbled patterns.

That being said, beautiful Deco radios were also made of wood, and often featured the “waterfall” design made of veneer over wood, a hallmark of the reasonably priced, mass-produced Art Deco furniture that flooded American homes throughout the 1930s and ‘40s.

Here is a gallery of radios from the 1920s, ‘30s and ‘40s.

They are wonderful ghosts of Art Deco

Magrish Belmont 6D-111

Dillon Addison 5

Wassell RCA 9TX21

Martin Bendix 110W

Ducro Addison A2E

Dince Airline 62-304

Kaetz Belmont 665

Biddison Powell Midget

Boyd Philco 60

Silvertone Model 4485

Zenith 12-S-267

RCA T10-1

Posted via email from muratgulmez