Clock Works. Radio does not.
Westinghouse AM Clock Radio
Late 1950s to early 1960s
Tube-powered clock radio — meaning it uses vacuum tubes rather than transistors, which became standard later in the 1960s.
Westinghouse was one of the big U.S. consumer electronics players at the time, alongside RCA, Zenith, and GE. Their clock radios were known for reliability and a warm, glowing aesthetic that matched midcentury interiors beautifully.
“Sleep” and “Alarm” toggles at bottom center
AM frequency scale beneath the clock
Classic dual-knob control layout
Delivery available throughout the GTA + beyond.
Shipping in Canada.
Email sabrina@sunday-creative.com for rates.
Clock Works. Radio does not.
Westinghouse AM Clock Radio
Late 1950s to early 1960s
Tube-powered clock radio — meaning it uses vacuum tubes rather than transistors, which became standard later in the 1960s.
Westinghouse was one of the big U.S. consumer electronics players at the time, alongside RCA, Zenith, and GE. Their clock radios were known for reliability and a warm, glowing aesthetic that matched midcentury interiors beautifully.
“Sleep” and “Alarm” toggles at bottom center
AM frequency scale beneath the clock
Classic dual-knob control layout
Delivery available throughout the GTA + beyond.
Shipping in Canada.
Email sabrina@sunday-creative.com for rates.