Vintage magazine cover and advertising art from the
Golden Age of American Illustration



You can help Magazineart.org: Subscribe to magazines; buy books about magazine design or books about American illustrators.

Login
MagazineArt.org Gallery: Top Level Advertising Art in Magazines Radio, Television, Phonographs, and Recordings Phonographs and Talking Machines Victor Talking Machines -1926B
Advanced Search
View Slideshow (Fullscreen)

Random Image

Life 1884-07-17

Life 1884-07-17

Date: 03/28/2010 Views: 4154

About: MagazineArt.org:
The Home Page
The Top Level
About This Website
What's New?
About the Magazines
About the Artists
About the Publishers
Contact Us
Your Privacy
Legal Notices
Copyrights
Help This Website
Thanks! and Our Volunteers
Reference Library
Our Bookstore
Our Poster Store
Interesting Links

 

 

Victor Talking Machines -1926B

Hip kids grooving out on the boom, boom of the bass aren't a new phenomenon. When Victor introduced its new Orthophonic line in late 1925, the top product was the Credenza. Here's an ad published about 1926 in a popular magazine.

Artist:
Source: Robert, KD4HSH
Restoration by: magscanner

Date: 05/06/2015
Owner: Magazine Art Gallery Administrator
Full size: 650x818
nextVincennes Phonographs -1927AlastVincennes Phonographs -1927A
Berliner Gramophone -1896Afirst Victor Talking Machines -1926Aprevious
Victor Talking Machines -1926B
nextVincennes Phonographs -1927AlastVincennes Phonographs -1927A
Berliner Gramophone -1896Afirst Victor Talking Machines -1926Aprevious

 

 

Original copyrights are the property of their creators or successors, where applicable; image restoration and processing copyright MagazineArt.org.

Have covers we're missing, or better copies? Can you scan them or take digital photographs? Send us e-mail.

This website is sponsored by Hidden Knowledge, publishers of electronic books. Visit the Hidden Knowledge websites:

| Hidden Knowledge | Travel History | Burton Holmes, Traveler | Rafael Sabatini | Trans-Siberian Rail | Look at Pictures |
| Blogs: Early Radio | Mike's Rail | Picture History | Old High Tech | Chromolithography

 

 

 

Powered by Gallery v2.2