Category: Inventions
Explore the fascinating evolution of technology through historic inventions that changed the world. From early aviation to bizarre gadgets — creativity knows no bounds.
Each photo celebrates human innovation and the spirit of discovery that pushed civilization forward.
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#3 Home and Office on Wheels: The 1952 Executive Flagship Had it All in One Vehicle #3 Inventions
Mid-century optimism spills across this colorful scene, where a streamlined “executive flagship” concept turns a single vehicle into an all-day destination. A striped canopy shades a rooftop deck crowded with lounging guests, while below, broad windows and clean body lines hint at a carefully planned interior meant for comfort as much as style. Even without…
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#5 Horn-like sound locators of the US Army
Arrayed across an open field, a line of US Army crews works beside strange, flower-like rigs mounted on trailers—banks of long horns aimed skyward as if listening for trouble. The men sit at their stations and adjust the angle of the collectors, turning raw air vibrations into something that could be measured, compared, and acted…
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#3 This machine actually sold already lit cigarettes for a penny.
A woman in a satin dress leans toward a chunky, boxy vending machine, smiling as she reaches for a cigarette from the dispenser’s slot. Bold lettering across the front advertises “LIGHTED CIGARETTE,” while a nearby panel teases onlookers with “Have you seen this,” turning the contraption into both sales pitch and sideshow. The whole setup…
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#19 A man purchases fresh eggs from the machine in Surrey, 1963.
A sweatered customer stands close to an egg vending machine, studying the instructions as he reaches for the mechanism—an everyday purchase made slightly futuristic. Bold lettering advertising “FARM EGGS” dominates the metal front, while smaller notices hint at rules of use and the promise of reliable produce. The scene feels both ordinary and experimental, the…
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#35 Not the most exciting vending machine — dispensing lumps of coal in France — but still useful once upon a time.
Practicality has its own kind of charm, and few inventions prove it better than a vending machine built not for sweets or cigarettes, but for something as bluntly useful as coal. The title points us to France, where an everyday fuel could be turned into an on-demand purchase—an early form of “self-service” that mattered most…
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#51 Shoppers could pick up household essentials from this machine. Goods available include Heinz Spaghetti and vegetable soup, Tetley tea, Sugar Puffs, Fray Bentos, Oxo Cubes, soup, light bulbs, mayonnaise and cocoa – all of which could be placed in housewives’ own bags, ca. 1960s.
A smiling shopper stands beside a tall, boxy vending machine crowned with the bold promise of “HOT DRINKS,” its glossy front panel dotted with cup graphics that suggest instant choice and modern convenience. The controls are designed for quick decisions—coin slots, instructions, and selection buttons—turning a simple pause in the day into something a little…
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#15 50+ Competitive Designs Submitted For The Construction Of Great Tower For London In 1890 #15 Inventions
Ambition leaps off the page in this printed proposal labeled “Design No. 14,” one of the many competitive ideas put forward for a “Great Tower for London” in the late Victorian era. The drawing marries a broad, arched base with a tapering lattice shaft that nods to the new language of iron engineering, then finishes…
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#31 50+ Competitive Designs Submitted For The Construction Of Great Tower For London In 1890 #31 Inventions
Numbered like a catalogue entry, “Design No. 34” rises from the page as a needle-thin proposal for a Great Tower for London, part of the burst of late‑Victorian invention and ambition hinted at in the title. The drawing favors a Gothic mood—tall lancet openings, clustered pinnacles, and a stacked, tapering shaft—suggesting a monument meant to…
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#47 50+ Competitive Designs Submitted For The Construction Of Great Tower For London In 1890 #47 Inventions
Page 100 introduces “DESIGN No. 46,” one of the many competitive proposals submitted for the construction of a “Great Tower for London” in the 1890 era of inventions and ambitious engineering. Rendered like a catalogue plate, the elevation is crisp and symmetrical, presenting an iron-lattice shaft rising from an ornate, masonry-like base with a grand…
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#63 50+ Competitive Designs Submitted For The Construction Of Great Tower For London In 1890 #63 Inventions
Numbered like a catalogue plate, “Design No. 63” rises from the page as a slender lattice tower with bold arches at its base and a needle-like summit, a confident proposal for London’s would-be “Great Tower” era. The clean drafting, centered composition, and spare typography evoke the world of Victorian engineering print culture, where ambition was…