Stunning phonograph mirror, Thomas Edison, vintage style, art nouveau, advertising sign, music collectible piece, gramophone memorabilia
Stunning phonograph mirror, Thomas Edison, vintage style, art nouveau, advertising sign, music collectible piece, gramophone memorabilia
Stunning phonograph mirror, Thomas Edison, vintage style, art nouveau, advertising sign, music collectible piece, gramophone memorabilia
Stunning phonograph mirror, Thomas Edison, vintage style, art nouveau, advertising sign, music collectible piece, gramophone memorabilia
Stunning phonograph mirror, Thomas Edison, vintage style, art nouveau, advertising sign, music collectible piece, gramophone memorabilia
Stunning phonograph mirror, Thomas Edison, vintage style, art nouveau, advertising sign, music collectible piece, gramophone memorabilia
Stunning phonograph mirror, Thomas Edison, vintage style, art nouveau, advertising sign, music collectible piece, gramophone memorabilia
Stunning phonograph mirror, Thomas Edison, vintage style, art nouveau, advertising sign, music collectible piece, gramophone memorabilia
Stunning phonograph mirror, Thomas Edison, vintage style, art nouveau, advertising sign, music collectible piece, gramophone memorabilia
Stunning phonograph mirror, Thomas Edison, vintage style, art nouveau, advertising sign, music collectible piece, gramophone memorabilia

Stunning Advertising Thomas Edison phonograph mirror

Regular price
£395.00 GBP
Sale price
£395.00 GBP
Regular price
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Shipping calculated at checkout.

Stunning phonograph Thomas Edison vintage mirror.

Art nouveau advertising collectible piece.

Lovely vibrant vintage advertising mirror showing a glamorous lady in elegant attire posing on the background in the detail picture on the phonograph player and the details.

“Everyone loves the Edison”

And the further vivid wording and the famous branding.

Come in a wonderful vintage condition with minor marks of patina, it’s made with a sturdy mahogany frame .

Height: 70cm
Length: 69cm
Width: 3cm

In 1885, Thomas Edison wrote, "I have not heard a bird sing since I was twelve." No one is really sure just how Edison lost most of his hearing. Yet this man invented the first machine that could capture sound and play it back. In fact, the phonograph was his favorite invention. The first phonograph was invented in 1877 at the Menlo Park lab. A piece of tin-foil was wrapped around the cylinder in the middle. You shouted a short message into the piece on one side of the cylinder while you turned the handle. Inside this piece was a needle. Your voice would make the needle shake, or vibrate. The sound vibrations would go through the needle and make a line, or groove, into the tin-foil. A needle on the other side could play back what you had just recorded. After just a few plays, the tin-foil would tear up and the message could no longer be played. That is why the tin-foil recordings cannot be played anymore. Later phonographs played records. The first ones were in the shape of a cylinder, with the music on the outside. Later records were shaped like discs, or large CDs. Edison loved the phonograph so much that he called it his "baby". He improved it over and over for the next fifty years.