The "Giant" 21" Coral Gable model Admiral TV, 1954
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Cannabis is making more appearances on television than at any point in our history. Is this growing prevalence of cannabis on television the result of slackening social and legal strictures or is television finally catching up to the culture which it mirrors?
One of the trendier ideas for hiding a TV is placing it behind mirrored glass. You can see it when it’s turned on; but the rest of the time it’s hidden
Old time tv set
If you've ever tried thrift hunting, the chances are you’re hooked. And as the coronavirus restrictions ease and the world is now returning to the quasi-normal modus operandi, secondhand aficionados are uniting for a long-awaited rummage into the post-pandemic finds.
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Are you into crafting for your cat? How about creating an up-cycled vintage TV cat bed for your niftiest of cats!
as you can see the tube can rotate back and forth and up and down.
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Vintage TV Prop Rentals | Prop house serving NYC, offering delivery and on site pick up at our location north of New York City.
These are more refreshing than a Sunny D.
You parents probably loved shag carpet, floral sofas, and their answering machines, but those are rarely seen in homes today. Take a look back at some of the most popular decorating trends from your childhood.
About This GTV1014 was one of the first 21-inch b / w televisions produced by Geloso. It uses the intercarrier system as an audio-video medium frequency. The chassis is mounted inside the cabinet made of fine wood with beautiful briar-like veins. The 21 '(21AUP4) kinescope (screen) is with a 70 degree deflection angle. The net weight is 42.4 kg, largely due to the cathode ray tube. It is sold as a decorative and collectible object, even if it should work the voltages and frequency must be changed according to your country.
The standing appointment of the inspiration blog to start your creative week! This series includes a mix of the best graphics & all other design fields artworks
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New product with old technology. The Retro Classic TV has a 14 inch display, an antenna and chrome legs. However, it has a digital tuner, video input and remote control. So it is not quite ancient. You can still change the image from color
In this tutorial you'll learn how to create a vintage television with the use of some basic techniques in Adobe Illustrator.
Are you into crafting for your cat? How about creating an up-cycled vintage TV cat bed for your niftiest of cats!
I so want this TV. There was an episode recently of American Pickers where they bought this Philco, it was in an out building or barn - I think I need to be a picker . . .
It's often interesting to examine design from the point when a type of product makes its first commercial appearance until things settle down to a "best" general solution that persists with relatively minor variations until the class of product becomes obsolete or a major technological advance requires a renewed design evolution. Designers are literally making things up as they're going on, uncertain what the ultimate general solution will be. There are trials, errors and successes (measured by market acceptance) along the way. Today's post deals with television set design evolution in a sketchy way from the late 1930s till nearly 1960. Call it 20 years -- 15 if the "time out" for World War 2 is factored in. By "sketchy" I mean that entire classes of TV sets such as tabletop or semi-portable examples are omitted from this review. Perhaps I'll get around to dealing with them another time. Marconi - 1937 RCA sets displayed at 1939 New York World's Fair For some reason many of the very earliest television sets that people could actually buy had a top with a mirror underneath that could be propped open when one was about to turn it on (the controls were under that top along with the cathode ray tube - CRT). The CRT was set up so that it projected a reversed image that the mirror then righted so that the image was normal -- that is, so any text images could be read normally. Actually, the reason is pretty obvious: the console containing the television set was simply another sort of cabinet when not in use, just another piece of furniture. (See below for later examples of this design strategy.) The problem with the mirror feature was that viewers had to be positioned almost exactly opposite the set and have their eyes at the correct height to be able to view the image properly. Direct-viewing TVs were less restricted. Even so, CRTs were small in the early days, so viewers still had to huddle and stay closer to the screen than later on. Mirror-top televisions were still being sold in the late 1940s, but then disappeared from the marketplace. Advertisement showing Dumont console - ca. 1950 For many years television sets resided in living rooms, where families tended to gather before the "family room" gained popularity in America starting, say, in the mid-1950s. Therefore the expensive TV set (and they often cost more than today's largest flat-screen TVs, adjusting for inflation) was a major item of furniture that many wives wanted to fit well with the rest of the décor. Note that the console has doors than can be closed to hide the screen when not in use. Crosley TV with radio/record player - 1950 This Crosley is a pretty typical less-than-a-console TV with respect to price and style. (Actually, the ensemble shown is contained in a console -- but the set itself in the upper-right corner could just have well be freestanding, and probably was in most cases.) It just sits there on one side of the living room and its big "eye" stares back at you all the time. Of course, this is how most television sets were over the last 60 years, console models having gradually faded from the scene. Zenith with round screen - 1950 For some reason Zenith built a line of sets with round screens for a few years. They seemed odd at the time, but at least a few people bought them. Why a round screen? Well, cathode ray tubes were round in those days and perhaps designers felt that a round "frame" for the image was "functional," the holy grail of purist industrial design and architecture. But source images were essentially rectangular, so the round format clipped off parts that might be of interest to the viewer. Philco Predicta - ca.1959 This TV set was built 10 years before the moon-landing image being shown on the screen. But hey, this design was really super-dooper space-age! Actually the modular screen/innards box concept wasn't a bad one; most desktop computers until recently followed the same practice. Philco's problem was that this line of TV sets was unreliable, thus helping to kill sales. Another negative might have been that the design would clash with traditional-style living room décor; TVs tended to reside in living rooms in those days, as noted above.