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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#20 A woman is operating the first potato vending machine in Britain in Chelsea, 1962.
Modern convenience, it turns out, once came wrapped in paper sacks and the earthy promise of “top quality washed, graded & pre-packed potatoes.” In this 1962 scene from Chelsea, a woman reaches into what the title calls Britain’s first potato vending machine, an early experiment in bringing automation to the everyday shopping list. The wall-sized…
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#36 Cream cheese and jelly sandwich anyone? Two sandwich vending machines from circa 1945.
Mid-century appetites met mid-century engineering in the era when a quick bite could be purchased the same way you’d buy cigarettes or a soda—by feeding a coin into a machine. The title’s promise of a cream cheese and jelly sandwich hints at how ambitious these circa-1945 vending machines were, offering not just snacks but assembled…
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#52 This woman is now able to use a credit card to pay for one of a selection of coffees from this self-serve machine, ca. 1960s.
A neat, everyday moment of mid-century modern life unfolds as a young woman operates a sleek self-serve drinks machine, her hand poised at the dispenser while a glass waits beneath. Big, bold lettering on the unit and the tidy counter setup evoke the era’s confidence in push-button convenience, when automated service was becoming part of…
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#16 50+ Competitive Designs Submitted For The Construction Of Great Tower For London In 1890 #16 Inventions
Numbered “38” at the top and labeled “DESIGN No. 15.”, this period page reads like a slice of Victorian ambition on paper: a proposed Great Tower for London rendered as a tall, tapering iron lattice with stacked stages, arched bracing, and a small flag crowning the summit. The draughtsmanship is spare but confident, giving the…
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#32 50+ Competitive Designs Submitted For The Construction Of Great Tower For London In 1890 #32 Inventions
Numbered “DESIGN No. 31.” at the top of the page, this proposal for a “Great Tower for London” places a slender, tapering spire above a tiered base of arches and galleries, balancing spectacle with a sense of structural order. Fine linework suggests an iron-lattice body wrapped in decorative bands, while the lower stages read almost…
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#48 50+ Competitive Designs Submitted For The Construction Of Great Tower For London In 1890 #48 Inventions
Perched on a printed catalogue page marked “Design No. 47,” this ambitious concept proposes an iron-latticed “Great Tower for London,” rising in a tapering silhouette to a clustered crown and flag. The illustration reads like a late‑Victorian answer to the age of engineering spectacle: a skeletal frame that promises height, lightness, and modernity, with small…
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#64 50+ Competitive Designs Submitted For The Construction Of Great Tower For London In 1890 #64 Inventions
Perched on a book page marked “Design No. 62,” this slender, tapering tower proposal rises like a needle from a decorative base, hinting at the late-Victorian hunger for grand engineering statements. The drawing’s fine linework emphasizes an open lattice structure that would have looked light yet ambitious against the London skyline, while the ornate lower…
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#11 Battery (1799) by Alessandro Volta
Alessandro Volta stands solemnly in a formal portrait, holding the compact apparatus associated with his breakthrough in electricity, while the adjacent view presents a museum-style reconstruction of the early battery itself. Together they frame a pivotal moment in the history of inventions: the move from fleeting static sparks to a controlled, repeatable source of electric…
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#27 Cinématographe Camera (1895) by Auguste and Louis Lumière
In a dim, workshop-like interior lined with drawers and shelves, two formally dressed men lean over a compact mechanical apparatus, their attention fixed on its optics and moving parts. One peers closely through a viewing tube while the other hovers beside a small light source, as if checking alignment or exposure. The scene carries the…
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#43 Gas Mask (1915) by John Scott Haldane
A uniformed figure stands outdoors with a cloth-like face covering and a prominent breathing apparatus strapped to his chest, its hose curling upward in a stark display of early respiratory protection. The number “12” is clearly marked on his helmet, while a bold armband with contrasting bands draws the eye to his sleeve. Practical and…