Librería: Blind-Horse-Books (ABAA), DeLand, FL, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 39,87
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoStapled Wraps. Condición: Very Good. United States: Mueller Climatrol Division of Worthington Corporation, circa 1955. Stapled illustrated wraps. A richly illustrated mid-century promotional catalog produced shortly after the 1954 merger of the L.J. Mueller Furnace Company with Worthington Corporation. Designed to present climate control as a hallmark of modern domestic life, the brochure combines bold commercial illustration, technical product specifications, and photographic factory imagery to promote Mueller Climatrol heating and air-conditioning systems. Oblong format; approximately 8.5 × 5.5 inches. Thirty-two pages. Fully illustrated throughout with color artwork, product diagrams, photographs, and layout graphics. Includes detailed listings of furnaces, air conditioners, blowers, coils, and related components, alongside lifestyle imagery framing climate control as essential to postwar comfort and family well-being. The bindings are firm and intact. Text is clean and bright. Light wear along the spine edge with a small stain at the front spine area; otherwise well preserved. A visually compelling and complete example of mid-1950s HVAC and industrial advertising ephemera. Issued shortly after the 1954 merger of L.J. Mueller Furnace Company with Worthington Corporation, this catalog reflects mid-century America's push toward centralized climate control as a marker of modern domestic life. Iconography Note: Contains period commercial illustration employing stylized, caricatured imagery reflective of mid-20th-century advertising conventions. Presented as a historical artifact of its time and valued for its documentary insight, not as an endorsement of outdated representations. Subjects: Heating and Air Conditioning History; HVAC Technology; Postwar Domestic Life; Industrial Advertising; Worthington Corporation; Mueller Climatrol; Mid-Century Commercial Illustration; American Manufacturing; Home Comfort and Modernization, Advertising Ephemera; Industrial Design; Mid-Century Americana; Corporate Promotional Literature; Twentieth-Century Nonfiction.