"The miracle of natural color tone" can be enjoyed from Joan Edwards and this 1945 General Electric radio. Sounds good to us!
Colorful sound could also be enjoyed from this 1948 Westinghouse console, featuring an "exclusive Automix record changer," Electronic Feather reproducer (no pennies needed), Rainbow Tone FM, short wave, and 25 watts of undistorted output.

This stunning McIntosh C11 vacuum tube stereo preamplifier was made from 1961 to 1963 and was packed with features like dual phono and dual tuner inputs, Tape and Tape HD (for tape decks without built-in preamps) inputs, bass and treble controls for each channel, five AC courtesy outlets, and a whole lot more. Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons/Hannes Grobe.
There's nothing like finding a New Old Stock (NOS) tube in its original box. This beauty is a 1930s MS4B tetrode from Marconiphone Co., Ltd. Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons/Joe Haupt.
Now you see her, now you don't, thanks to this invisible ray from 1921. If this thing worked, why don't we see anything like it today? Oh wait...from Science and Invention magazine.
Header image courtesy of Pexels.com/Nikita Korchagin.
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