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There is something deeply comforting about old visions of the future. Not because they were accurate, they absolutely were not, but because they were hopeful in a very specific, very charming way.
Back in the 1930s, 40s, and especially the 1950s, the future was always clean, optimistic, and full of gadgets that looked like friendly appliances. Flying cars were a given. Video phones were massive wall mounted TVs that required you to sit perfectly still. Kitchen robots existed, but they mostly looked like aggressive toasters with arms whose main job was to hand you a martini.
These illustrations and magazine spreads weren't trying to predict reality. They were selling a feeling. A tomorrow where technology made life easier, happier, and somehow more polite. No pop up ads. No low battery anxiety. No updates installing at the worst possible moment.
What makes these visions so fascinating now is how wrong they were in the most delightful ways. We didn't get jetpacks or robot butlers, but we did get supercomputers in our pockets that past artists somehow never imagined would be boring black rectangles.
This list is a time capsule of dreams. A reminder that imagining the future says more about the present than what's actually coming next. And honestly, some of these futures look way more fun than what we ended up with.