Bob Keeshan (Captain Kangaroo) and Bennye Gatteys from the television program Captain Kangaroo, 1959, with Grandfather Clock.
Clock stopped at moment of Hiroshima impact.
Yves Marchand and Romain Meffre; Melted clock, Cass Technical High School
Image of peach radio by Cassia Beck.
Custom, one-of-a-kind camera clocks from Van Dusen Clockworks.
A 1950s Kit Cat clock.
Self-taught artist Frank Jones, c. 1968-1969, Smithsonian American Art Museum
1960s classic IBM Clock.
Silent film star Harold Lloyd in “Safety First,” 1923.
Detail from work by self-taught artist Adolf Wolfli (1864-1930).
George Nelson mid-century clock by Knoll, 1950s.
Nixie clock containing wire-mesh anode and multiple cathodes in the shape of numerals.
U.S. Army military clock, manufactured by Chelsea Clock Company, c. 1920-1930.
U.S. Government clock with 24-hour dial, manufactured by Chelsea Clock Company, c. 1920-1930.
Group of simple mechanical school/industrial clocks, France, c. 1930
Waltham dashboard car clock, simple form, nickel casing, American c. 1920
Steampunk clock designed by Amahl Shukup, using a 1910 clockcase and found industrial parts.
Single digit steampunk nixie clock.
Diagram of a clock assembly.
The time 11:11 seems to have meaning for many people.
Burned room with clock at abandoned Emge Foods Plant in Fort Branch, Indiana.
Vintage watch face by Newgate.
Westclox Earth paperweight clock — 1936-1938
1930s Ingersoll vintage “Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf” alarm clock
