One of these is not a radio.
343 notes
·
View notes
Old radios by Jessie Askinazi.
Originally posted on April 19, 2014, from jessieaskinazidiary on Tumblr, now deactivated.
11 notes
·
View notes
flickr
Vintage Zenith Tombstone Table Radio, Model 808, AM & SW Bands, 6 Vacuum Tubes, Wood Cabinet, Made In USA, Circa 1934 by Joe Haupt
3 notes
·
View notes
Mid-Century Radios
From Genuine Plastic Radios of the Mid-Century, Ken Jupp & Leslie Piña, 1998.
11K notes
·
View notes
Bunny-eared Rockettes relax during a rehearsal of the current Easter show at New York’s Radio City Music Hall on April 5, 1966 | Anthony Camerano
1K notes
·
View notes
S.P. Radio // Sailor R109 // marine receiver (Denmark, 1973)
7K notes
·
View notes
Radio Queen. Radiolympia Trade & Consumer Show - 1939.
32 notes
·
View notes
#QSLfriday A verification letter from one amateur radio enthusiast to another from 1926. According to radiomuseum.org, Globe Electric Company in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, manufactured battery radios for a few years in the early 1920s. In 1925, they stopped making sets and switched to manufacturing radio components only.
Committee to Preserve Radio Verifications | Tumblr Archive
7 notes
·
View notes
flickr
Vintage Radio Collection - Mostly Vacuum Tube Radios & Transistor Radios by Joe Haupt
0 notes
From Vincent Price's radio show, "The Saint" circa 1950. This man is a true legend. I adore him.
Ladies and gentlemen, poison doesn’t always come in bottles. And it isn’t always marked with the skull and crossbones of danger. Poison can take the form of words and phrases and acts: the venom of racial and religious hatred. Here in the United States, perhaps more than ever before, we must learn to recognize the poison of prejudice and to discover the antidote to its dangerous effects. Evidences of racial and religious hatred in our country place a potent weapon in the hands of our enemies, providing them with the ammunition of criticism. Moreover, group hatred menaces the entire fabric of democratic life. As for the antidote: you can fight prejudice, first by recognizing it for what it is, and second by actively accepting or rejecting people on their individual worth, and by speaking up against prejudice and for understanding. Remember, freedom and prejudice can’t exist side by side. If you choose freedom, fight prejudice.
5K notes
·
View notes
1974 National/Panasonic German Catalog feat. portable radios
(via: archive.org)
950 notes
·
View notes