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Motor Vehicle patent. Vintage car illustration.
Motor Vehicle — US Patent No. 791,210. This artwork is the original U.S. Patent Office illustration accompanying a motor-vehicle patent, presented through carefully composed side and plan views. Executed as a monochrome line engraving, the drawing...Regular price From $32.34 -
Dynamo electric machine patent by D M Bliss.
Dynamo Electric Machine — US Patent No. 669,574, patented March 12, 1901. This artwork is the original patent illustration submitted by the inventor, showing two engraved figures: a frontal sectional view and a longitudinal cutaway. Executed...Regular price From $23.42 -
Vintage bicycle patent 1899 by M. C Johnson.
Bicycle, U.S. Patent No. 618,356 (issued 1899) presents an inventive bicycle construction focused on improved stability and mechanical efficiency. The patent drawings are executed in clean black-and-white technical linework, detailing the frame geometry, wheel alignment, and...Regular price From $23.42 -
Automobile Drive Gear patent 787908 by Henry Ford. Vintage car
Automobile Drive Gear — US Patent No. 787,908. This artwork is the original U.S. Patent Office illustration documenting an automobile drive-gear mechanism, presented through precise black-ink line engravings with sectional and elevation views. The drawing concentrates...Regular price From $23.42 -
Vintage Adjustable Nut Cracker patent by William H. Edwards.
Adjustable Nut Cracker (US Patent No. 627,401) — 1899. A practical industrial-design object rendered as a technical drawing and metal tool: a hand-operated nutcracker with adjustable, wedge-shaped jaws and a screw/lever arrangement allowing varied nut sizes....Regular price From $23.42 -
Firearm mechanism patent by John M. Browning.
J. M Browning firearm patent 1897 Number 580923 This Firearm Mechanism is a detailed patent illustration by John Moses Browning, documenting a mechanically advanced repeating firearm system. John M. Browning was one of the most influential...Regular price From $23.42
Patent illustrations are technical drawings created to visually explain the design, structure, or operation of an invention in a patent application. They are typically produced in black and white with clean lines, labels, and precise details to meet official patent office standards. These illustrations help examiners understand how an invention works and what makes it unique. Patent drawings became especially important during the Industrial Revolution as inventors sought legal protection for new technologies and mechanical devices. Today, vintage patent illustrations are also popular as decorative art prints because of their elegant and highly detailed appearance.