Gizmo series
Braun TP1
Braun · Radio record player · 1959
- From the Laurence King book Gizmo: The Retro-Tech We Loved and Lost — May 2026
- Featured in The Guardian · The Times · Elle Decoration
- Free UK delivery on every order · Worldwide shipping
In 1959, Dieter Rams combined a transistor radio and a record player into a single device and covered it with a perspex lid. The result sits in the permanent collection of MoMA. Design as honesty rather than decoration.
About this print
About this print
In 1959, Dieter Rams combined a transistor radio and a record player into a single portable device and covered it with a clear perspex lid. The Braun TP1 was not the first portable record player, but it was the one that made the category look serious. Clean white casing, minimal controls, that transparent cover that let you see the mechanism rather than hiding it - design as honesty rather than decoration.
The TP1 sits in the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York. It is one of the objects that made Rams' reputation, and one of the clearest early examples of the design language that would eventually influence an entire generation of product designers, including Jony Ive at Apple.
This Gizmo print captures the TP1 in precise technical illustration - the compact rectangular form, the perspex lid, the record player and radio that proved utility and beauty were the same thing.
The Gizmo series
The Gizmo series
Gizmo is a collection of design-led art prints built around the machines that shaped how we made music, wrote code, played and connected with the world. Synthesisers and drum machines. Cameras and home computers. Calculators and handheld devices that once felt like the future.
Each print is a carefully constructed illustration that isolates what made an object memorable - its proportions, controls, typography, surfaces, and small acts of engineering intelligence. Not retro sentimentality, but honest observation: what made these machines distinctive, how they looked when they were new, and why their forms still resonate.
Adapted from and inspired by Simon Tyler's forthcoming book Gizmo: Retro-Tech We Loved and Lost, published by Laurence King in May 2026.
Paper and printing
Paper and printing
All prints are produced to order on 250gsm archival matte paper using pigment-based inks, chosen for colour accuracy and long-term stability.
Each print is rolled in acid-free tissue and shipped in a rigid cardboard tube, sealed for moisture protection, ready for framing on arrival.
Dimensions
Dimensions
Large · 50 × 70 cm · 20 × 28 in
XLarge · 70 × 100 cm · 28 × 40 in
Delivery
Delivery
UK: Free · 3-5 working days
Europe: €8.50 · 3-7 working days · No customs charges
USA & Canada: $8.95 / $12.00 CAD · 5-10 working days
Australia: $14.00 AUD · 5-10 working days
Rest of World: £14.95 · 7-14 working days
All prints are produced to order and dispatched within 1-3 working days. Orders placed before 5pm GMT ship the same day. You'll receive tracking information by email once dispatched.
Orders outside Europe may be subject to local customs charges on delivery - these are the responsibility of the recipient.
Returns
Returns
Returns accepted within 30 days. Email returns@axisophy.com with your order number and we'll provide return instructions.
Return postage is the customer's responsibility except where the print arrives damaged or there's been an error - in which case we'll arrange a replacement or refund immediately, no return needed.