Viktor Schreckengost was an American industrial designer as well as a teacher, sculptor, and artist. His wide-ranging work included noted pottery designs, industrial design, bicycle design and seminal research on radar feedback. Schreckengost's peers included designers Raymond Loewy, Norman Bel Geddes, Eva Zeisel, and Russel Wright.
New Yorker punch bowl, Schrenkengost & Cowan Pottery, 1930, Cleveland Museum of Art
Industrial design is a process of design applied to physical products that are to be manufactured by mass production. It is the creative act of determining and defining a product's form and features, which takes place in advance of the manufacture or production of the product. Industrial manufacture consists of pre-determined, standardized and repeated, often automated, acts of replication, while craft-based design is a process or approach in which the form of the product is determined personally by the product's creator largely concurrent with the act of its production.
Calculator Olivetti Divisumma 24 designed in 1956 by Marcello Nizzoli
A Fender Stratocaster with sunburst finish, one of the most widely recognized electric guitars in the world
Model 1300 Volkswagen Beetle
Olivetti Valentine typewriter