Skip to main content

Eerily beautiful photos highlight how TV tech has changed

An old TV set.
Photo: Lee Chapman / Lee Chapman

A remarkable set of photos taken by Japan-based photographer Lee Chapman shows old, long-forgotten television sets in their original surroundings.

The eerily beautiful images were captured by Chapman over the last 10 years during explorations of abandoned houses, hotels, and schools buried deep in the Japanese countryside.

An old TV set.
Photo: Lee Chapman

The pictures of places that once bustled with life are also a stark reminder of just how much television technology has changed over the decades, with old CRT (cathode-ray tube) sets having long ago given way to more advanced flat-screen models with increasingly advanced displays.

Recommended Videos

“Televisions remain an ever-present feature in the home and hotel room, but just like viewing habits, designs have changed enormously, and the TV sets are a nice reminder of just how dramatic those changes have been,” the photographer said.

An old TV set.
Photo: Lee Chapman

Chapman, also an accomplished street photographer whose work has appeared in publications around the world, has a longtime fascination with “haikyo,” the Japanese word for “ruins,” and consequently often stumbles across various technologies that have fallen by the wayside.

An old TV set.
Photo: Lee Chapman

“Finding personal items in an abandoned building is always most affecting, but in some ways old tech can feel the same,” Chapman told Digital Trends. “Telephones previously used on a daily basis, and TVs around which people would’ve once gathered, not only give an indication of time but also make it easier to imagine the lives of those who once spent time there.”

Photo: Lee Chapman

To see Chapman’s full set of images of television sets from a bygone era — ancient Toshiba, Hitachi, and National models among them — be sure to view the post on his photo site.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

Digital Trends interviewed Lee Chapman about his street photography work a few years back. You can check out the article here.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Spotify says the pandemic has changed how we listen to music and podcasts
bose noise cancelling headphones 700 voice enhancing black 2

 

Not even your Spotify listening habits are safe from being affected by the coronavirus pandemic.

Read more
See how Fujifilm’s popular X100 camera has changed over the years
fujifilm x100v announced with new lens 4k video lifestyle 1

 

Ever since the original model appeared in 2011, Fujifilm’s X100 camera has become hugely popular with street photographers around the world.

Read more
You Asked: QDEL replacing OLED? The end of 55″ & 65″ TVs?
You Asked Episode 82: QDEL Replacing OLED

On today’s episode of You Asked: Will we get USB-C on TVs and could it replace HDMI? What’s the latest on QDEL? Can AVRs damage your picture quality? And are 55- and 65-inch TV sizes being phased out?
Could USB-C replace HDMI?

Leon writes: Given technological developments, why don't manufacturers try to equip TVs with USB-C? Maybe it can later replace HDMI, which is capable of sending both audio and video signals. Are there any limitations besides the fact that media electronics still run on HDMI? It would be convenient to connect your mobile phone or computer with USB-C like on monitors. Do you think we will see it in the near future?

Read more