View allAll Photos Tagged Televisionsets?

… präsentieren mit Stolz ihre Stargäste aus den Vereinigten Staaten!! 🎶🎸🎹🎶😎

Die Zwillinge Brandy und Candy sind aus dem fernen Atlanta, Georgia angereist um mit den Twinis zu musizieren !!

Danke Connie und Jeanne für Eure Fotos !

 

... proudly present their star guests from the United States !!

🎶🎸🎹🎶😎

The twins Brandy and Candy have travelled from far away Atlanta, Georgia to play music with the Twinis !!

Thank you Connie and Jeanne for your photos !

… tobt vor Begeisterung und die Twinis verabschieden sich gemeinsam mit ihren Gästen aus den Vereinigten Staaten, Brandy und Candy !! Bis zum nächsten Mal !! 👋🎶🎸🎹🎶👋

Danke Connie und Jeanne für Eure Fotos !

 

... goes wild with enthusiasm and the Twinis say goodbye together with their guests from the United States, Brandy and Candy !!! See you next time !! 👋🎶🎸🎹🎶👋

Thank you Connie and Jeanne for your photos !

Endlich erscheint auch die Sängerin der Rock'n'Roll Band "THE TWINIS" und nun ist die Band komplett !!

Danke Connie für Deine Fotos von Asha !

  

Finally the singer of the Rock'n'Roll band "THE TWINIS" appears and now the band is complete !!

Thank you Connie for your photos of Asha !

Am Ende gibt es tosenden Applaus für die Tänzer und die Gruppe die Twinis !! 🎉👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋🎉

Danke Connie für Deine Fotos von Asha !

 

At the end there is thunderous applause for the dancers and the group the Twinis !! 🎉 👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋🎉

Thank you Connie for your photos of Asha !

Ein Paar der TWINIS beginnt nun Rock 'n' Roll zu tanzen ...

🎶🎸🎹🎶

Danke Connie für Deine Fotos von Asha !

  

One pair of THE TWINIS now starts to dance Rock 'n' Roll ...

🎶🎸🎹🎶

Thank you Connie for your photos of Asha !

... sehen sich im Fernsehen die Rock'n'Roll Band "THE TWINIS" an und singen begeistert mit !!

Aber... 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 ... fehlt da nicht ein Zwilling ?

Danke Connie für Deine Fotos von Asha !

 

... watch the Rock'n'Roll band "THE TWINIS" on TV and sing along enthusiastically !!

But... 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 ... isn't there a twin missing ?

Thank you Connie for your photos of Asha !

Die Rock'n' Roll Tänze beim Konzert der Twinis gehen ins Finale und die Stimmung erreicht ihren Höhepunkt …

 

The Rock'n'Roll dances at the Twinis concert are entering the finale and the atmosphere is reaching its highpoint ...

Die Stimmung auf der Bühne steigt, der Klavierspieler springt auf den Hocker und die haarigen Zwillinge zeigen ihre Kunst mit weiteren Instrumenten und Brillen … !!

🎶🎸🎹🎶😎

Danke Connie für Deine Fotos von Asha !

  

The mood on stage rises, the piano player jumps on the stool and the hairy twins show their art with more instruments and glasses ... !!

🎶🎸🎹🎶😎

Thank you Connie for your photos of Asha !

An Epiphone guitar hangs with nothing on the TV. A full discography of music influenced by rock & roll of the 1970s & 80s streams on all platforms at: hypeddit.com/pennanbrae/discography

Mount says "Mar 61"

 

I bought this slide as part of a lot on eBay, and I think it's golden. I completely understand how people need to downsize and trim and get rid of their slides or their parents' stuff, but oh how this shot sparks the imagination. Look at all the faces: what did the photographer do to provoke them?

Date unknown.

 

300460

Studio 40 at the CBC building.

"TV Rodin (le penseur)" Nam June Paik 1978

Monitor, camera, plaster casted sculpture

Sculpture: 42x 27 x 20 cm

Overall dimensions: 132 x 110 x 115 cm

 

Sony Alpha A7sII+Sony FE 70-200mm F4 G OSS

© Ivan Herrador

 

"Skin has become inadequate in interfacing with reality. Technology has become the body's new membrane of existence." (Nam June Paik-Korean American Composer, Performer, Sculptor, Video and Digital Artist).

 

"Considered the father of video art, Nam June Paik pioneered the use of televisual electronic media in art. An integral member of the Fluxus movement alongside John Cage and George Macunias, Paik sought new modes of artistic expression and cultural exchange in his music, performances, and media works. Paik recognized the TV as more than a content delivery mechanism in works such as Zen for TV, a broken television broadcasting only a horizontal line across the screen. He created numerous robots composed of television sets, produced a synthesizer that allowed him and others to manipulate electronic imagery in real-time, and made the first video collages with found imagery. Coining the term “the electronic superhighway,” he imagined a world in which human beings near and far would be connected through radio waves and television broadcast channels—in many ways predicting the internet. Paik explored the widening reach of media in his large-scale video installations that display an assault of flickering of images and masterpieces like Good Morning, Mr. Orwell, a groundbreaking live performance broadcast on television in five countries on January 1, 1989, which offered a utopian answer to Orwell’s bleak predictions for the future in his classic novel 1984."

 

Source:

 

www.artsy.net/artwork/nam-june-paik-tv-rodin-le-penseur

 

"(,,,) Cet artiste coréen est un des premiers à avoir compris les conséquences de l'apparition de la télévision et il est considéré comme le "pape" de l'art video. Il utilise une caméra, une statuette du "Penseur" et un petit écran, comme si l'image dans le petit écran pouvait être l'illustration de la réflexion du personnage assis. La représentation télévisuelle devient la plus forte et la caméra assure le lien. "

 

Source:

 

culturebox.francetvinfo.fr/le-blog-de-thierry-hay/2015/11...

An undated photo of a fuzzy dog in a living room.

 

Originally posted on Ipernity: Fuzzy Dog.

Written on the back: "12/29/67 - Bo."

 

Bo on the floor and Tennessee Ernie Ford on the TV. I'm not sure whose legs those are on the couch.

 

For another dogs-TV-legs combination, see Fuzzy Dog (below).

Elliot supposedly watching himself on tv.

 

The tv frame is a fish tank I captured in a pet shop using my phone camera. I added scanlines to the screen image to make it look like an analogue tv screen (visible when viewed large).

 

Sydney, Australia (Sunday 18 March 2018)

Scrambled Television Screen ca. 2000

Handwritten note on the other side of this snapshot: "First set we had."

 

A photo of an early RCA Victor television set, possibly a 9-T-246 model with a ten-inch screen from the late 1940s or early 1950s. Compare this with the RCA 9T246 on the Early Television Museum's site.

 

For another early TV, see Philco Television Set, 1948.

 

A Vintage Photos Theme Park photo for the theme of screens - indoor, outdoor, any kind.

A pair of old abandoned televisions sets, seen whilst out walking along a footpath through deserted farm outbuildings at Old Park Farm, Slaugham, West Sussex.

12/14/2013

 

Olympus mju II

Fujifilm Super HQ 200

An undated snapshot of a man trying to adjust a rabbit ear TV antenna to get better reception on his television set. Or maybe he was just goofing around.

A brunette lady in a checkered blouse and dark Capri pants posing next to a television set in an interior of a 1950s American home. A starburst clock, a flokati rug, two small vases, and a figurine of a girl holding a telephone receiver can also be seen in the photo. The print is dated "JUN 59".

 

Country of origin: USA

The handwritten note on the other side of this undated photo says, "Here's a picture of a good-looking couple. I've intended to send you one of these for so long -- yrs.! Love, Judy."

{"focusMode":0,"deviceTilt":-0.01125591062009335,"qualityMode":3,"macroEnabled":false,"whiteBalanceProgram":0}

Two drawer wood chest from Jo-Anne's or Michael's.

Stain the wood with black or brown Sharpie.

Legs are round dowel, one inch long.

Cross stitch Aida cloth for speaker cover.

Screen is an image found on Pinterest.

Control knobs are beads and scrapbook stickers stuck to balsa wood.

The Design Centre, part of the Council for Industrial Design, was a centre in London's Haymarket that was open to the public from 1956 until 1998. It was part of the work of the Design Council that had been set up in 1944 as the Council for Industrial Design, part of a government backed policy to improve the standard of design in the UK. Part of its public education programme included publications (such as the excellent "Design magazine produced from 1949 until 1999) that helped bring to consumers attention what was considered key exemplars of good industrial and product design and what was available that matched such standards, including products that featured in the Council's "Design Index". This is one of a series of late 1960s publications on mostly household subjects such as sound and vision. It includes TV, radio, sound recording and reproduction equipment and explains much jargon as, for example, television moved from 405 lines to 625 lines of definition and black & white to colour. The author was P E M Sharp and the book was designed by Broom Lynne MSIA. The cover photograph, of a hip suburban couple, is by Dennis Hooker and features a Ferrograph 631 tape recorder, a Relosound RB microphone, a Murphy V197U black and white television as well as a Murphy turntable and an HMV FM/AM radio set.

 

The Design Council still exists but one seldom if ever hears about them - such an educational and information role seems to withered in modern times.

A snapshot of the décor in the corner of a room in 1969 includes a television set, chair, rugs, and a distinctive boot-shaped vase filled with flowers.

 

But wait a second! What is that faint image on the television? The date on the photo indicates that it was developed in August 1969. Could those shadowy figures on the TV screen have anything to do with the live broadcast of the first moonwalk, which took place during the Apollo 11 mission in July 1969?

 

For an answer to that question, see Live Coverage of the Moonwalk, July 1969 (below).

A cheerful young lady posing in a strapless evening dress and white opera gloves. She's probably dressed up for prom night. There's a slightly creepy quality to the gloomy room – in which only a mirror, a lamp, and a television set can be seen – reminiscent of interiors in David Lynch pictures. The print is dated "JUL 60".

 

Country of origin: USA

I'm in the joy division.

Art and adventures in Slab City, California.

Model: Tessa Hemnes

Shot on July 16, 2015

This is a photo of a Philco 48-1001 television set, which was manufactured in 1948 and had a 10-inch television screen. I bought this along with a second photo showing 1948 Republican presidential nominee Thomas Dewey and his wife at the Republican National Convention, which was held in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in June 1948. The image of Dewey and his wife is actually a photo of the screen of this TV set taken during the broadcast of the Republican convention, which was the first nationally televised presidential convention. See also a cropped version of the second photo.

 

A photo of outdated technology (typewriters, record players, etc) for the Vintage Photos Theme Park.

Rose Clare Leonard, in a New York department store, views

a 5" by 7" screen in the first public postwar demonstration.

-- The Atlantic, October 30th 2011

 

Photographer Ed Ford

for the Associated Press

 

This 1945 television cost $100,

which is $1,440 in 2025 dollars

"40 Winks Motel. Route U.S. 11—5 Miles South of Harrisburg. Mechanicsburg, Penna. Approved AAA Motel."

 

Printed on the back of this linen postcard:

 

40 Winks Motel

 

Located on U.S. Route 11. 5 miles south of Harrisburg, Pa.

 

8 miles east of Pa. Turnpike (Carlisle interchange). Located on Harrisburg's beautiful West Shore. Heart of Cumberland Co., overlooking the Blue Ridge Mts. Wall-to-wall carpeting, deluxe furnishings, drapes, cross ventilation, "air-conditioned," T.V. in rooms. Restaurants nearby.

 

Owned and operated by Edward and Bernice Weibley. Telephone: Harrisburg POplar 6-9091. Mailing address: Mounted Route, Mechanicsburg, Pa.

 

Pub. by Mellinger Studios. Lancaster, Pa. Photography by James E. Hess. 90425.

Handwritten note on the other side of this photo: "George Vogt & Housekeeper, 1960."

 

Printed on the back: "This is a Kodakcolor Print made by Kodak, January 1960 - RC."

 

The woman on the sofa is holding a glass in her hand, and there's a second glass on the tray that's on the coffee table. A small basket on the tray probably contained snacks of some sort.

 

Wallpaper with a distinctive design surrounds the television in the corner.

 

For some more TVs, see Pipe-Smoking Television Man and the other photos in my album of Televisions.

 

A Vintage Photos Theme Park photo for the theme of television sets in the living room.

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