In 1842, the US patent office registered 14 designs, including a bathtub and a ‘corpse preserver’. It now handles 35,000 a year. Why did this once sedate world became a corporate arms race?

It was designed to make sharpening a pencil feel as thrilling as flying a jet. A gleaming chrome teardrop, tapered to a point and adorned with a bullet-like handle, Raymond Loewy’s aerodynamic tail-fin pencil sharpener brought the glamour of the machine age to the humble office desk.

As the godfather of American industrial design, Loewy gave his streamlined signature to trains, planes and Coca-Cola vending machines, defining the sleek art deco look of the 1930s. But his go-faster pencil sharpener never made it into production, deemed one chrome-plated, deco-styled step too far. The design does survive in the form of its patent, filed in 1933 and now republished as one of 1,000 such protected inventions, brought together in a new book.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Paul Merson: ‘I was at the Brit Awards and asked Kylie Minogue out. She said no’

The football pundit on his very expensive suit, fighting addiction and why…

Star Wars: Squadrons Explores the Changing Face of Fascism

In early October, EA released Star Wars: Squadrons, a shiny new, VR-ready…

Blind date: ‘He hadn’t read the social-distancing memo’

Eddie, 79, human rights activist, meets Gisela, 65, teacher What were you…

Twitter quietly makes a HUGE change to the platform – and users are absolutely baffled by the update

Elon Musk has made yet another big change to X (formerly Twitter), and…