When Sputnik 1 launched on October 4, 1957, the “Space Age” arrived all at once and pop culture quickly followed.  Soon, the obsession with rockets, capsules, and futuristic materials showed up everywhere: architecture, furniture, fashion, and especially the objects we gathered around at home.

Stereo systems and record players were perfect candidates for the look. Housed in pods, globes, and glossy shells, they became the centerpiece of the room, part sound system and part sculpture.

From “stereo eggs” to full-blown spaceship consoles, The Vinyl Factory’s roundup captures just how imaginative audio design got in the 1960s and ’70s.

Here are a few standouts that still feel wonderfully futuristic:

Vintage Weltron 2007 AM/FM stereo radio and 4-track cassette recorder with a lid open, placed on a round surface beside a modern lamp.
A vintage Weltron stereo system featuring a round turntable with a clear lid, two vertical speakers on either side, and a modern design set against a purple background. The text includes 'the new shape of sound' and '2006', with a smaller image of a yellow version of the turntable.

Weltron 2005 / 2007

Inspired by 2001: A Space Odyssey, this “spaceship” turntable is pure Space Age theatre. Lift the visor and you’ll find a turntable, radio, cassette deck, and built-in speakers.


A woman is interacting with a unique audio equipment featuring spherical speakers, while a man sits relaxed in a modern chair in the background.
A woman in a pink dress sits beside a vintage audio system with a wooden lid, featuring knobs and dials, flanked by two round speakers.

Clairtone Project G

Made in Canada between 1964 and 1967, with only 400 produced, this high-end console was the kind of object that signaled modern living and serious money, equivalent to about $20,000 today.


A modern turntable setup featuring a sleek design with a transparent cover, vinyl record on the platter, and a variety of control knobs and buttons for audio mixing.

Wega 3300

Designed by Verner Panton, this system is a crisp collision of Bauhaus logic and pop-art color, a compact cube that still looks gallery-ready.


A retro advertisement for Electrohome showcasing two women, one standing and one seated at a stylish stereo console, with a dramatic waterfall in the background.
An advertisement featuring a unique chair with an integrated stereo system, showcasing a stylish design and functional elements.

Electrohome Circa 75

Described as a “communications nerve centre for the future,” this prototype went beyond hi-fi. It was a circular pod connected to a wall-screen TV and even a cockpit-style chair with built-in controls.


A vintage Sanyo record player with a dome cover, featuring a turntable, tonearm, and control panel.

Sanyo Phonosphere

A globe-like sphere that pivots, plus a mirrored, glittering “ballroom” light effect. It is an audio object designed to be watched as much as heard.


A vintage music player featuring large speaker panels with circular mesh designs, analog dials, and control knobs, mounted on a wheeled base.

Brionvega RR126

A modular Italian design classic, with speakers that can be stacked or spread out. It feels more like a playful furniture system than a typical stereo.


Vintage advertisement for a Kuba stereo console featuring a television screen and distinctive angled design, accompanied by a portrait of a woman.

Kuba Komet

The “mothership” of the era: a rocket-like structure with TV, radio, phonograph, and an array of speakers, plus a price tag that once exceeded a year’s average wage.

What’s most charming about these designs is how unafraid they are. They do not try to disappear into the background. They make listening feel like an event, a small, everyday brush with the future.


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Author

Ben VanderVeen is the founder and editor of Moss & Fog, one of the web’s longest-running visual culture destinations. Since 2009, he’s been finding and framing the most beautiful, surprising, and thought-provoking work in art, architecture, design, and nature — reaching over 325,000 readers each month. He lives in Portland, Oregon.

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