Description
A rotary telephone dial from 1957 dominates this black and white photograph, its numbered finger holes and letter combinations arranged in a circle around a central "PUBLIC TELEPHONE" hub. The grainy, high-contrast image captures the mechanical precision of mid-century communication technology, with partial views of the phone's outer casing visible at the edges, creating a nostalgic document of analog-era artwork. At home in a study, office, or space celebrating twentieth-century design and technology history. Made to order by hand at our own Denver facility, it arrives as nine wood panels, each a half-inch thick with a keyhole on the back so it hangs easily. The natural grain shows through the artwork, so no two come out exactly alike.