
Vintage Chanel N°5 Ad: Monochromatic Fashion Art | The Record
Last updated: 09 Mar 2026
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Magnavox Star System 1981 Leonard Nimoy TV Advertisement | 'The Picture of Reliability' | Deep Analysis Rarity Class A-SS
The advertisement analyzed here is a full-page full-color magazine promotion for Magnavox's Star® System color television sets, copyright © 1981 N.A.P. Consumer Electronics Corp. The ad features what is almost certainly Leonard Nimoy — iconic for his role as Mr. Spock in Star Trek — dressed in a black nehru-collar uniform against a surrealist desert landscape, standing above a Magnavox color TV set (Model 4265, 19-inch diagonal) that displays an hourglass on screen. A second hourglass appears behind him. The visual concept communicates timeless reliability. The headline 'The Picture of Reliability' and tagline 'The brightest ideas in the world are here today' frame Magnavox's Star System as the pinnacle of 1981 television technology. The rainbow spectrum stripe at the bottom is a distinctive brand element that ran across Magnavox advertising throughout the early 1980s. N.A.P. (North American Philips) Consumer Electronics Corp. was the American subsidiary of Philips that owned the Magnavox brand at this time, having acquired it in 1974.

True Blood of the Trans-Am: The 1970 Ford Mustang Boss 302 Legacy
Experience the raw spirit of an American muscle car legend through an authentic, pre-2000 analog magazine advertisement, carefully extracted as a single sheet.

Vintage 70s Crown Royal Ad: Vanishing Analog Art | The Record
An in-depth look at the priceless 1970s Crown Royal "Have you ever seen a grown man cry?" advertisement. A masterpiece of authentic analog photography on degrading vintage paper, driving up the value of this original print as global supply inevitably shrinks.

Vintage Chivas Regal x Charles Saxon Ad: The Vanishing Playboy Art | The Record
An in-depth look at the Chivas Regal ad from Playboy magazine, illustrated by legendary artist Charles Saxon. A magazine-sized piece of authentic analog art on degrading vintage paper, driving up its value as an alternative asset.
