Electricity Tank Tops
Description: A stylized, cartoonish artwork featuring a vintage anthropomorphic electricity mascot—reminiscent of old public safety campaigns—interacting suggestively with a pin-up style woman. The electricity figure is illustrated with red lightning bolt limbs and a smiling face, holding a pair of electrical plugs. The woman, drawn in a retro aesthetic, is kneeling and smiling, posed in a flirtatious manner, seemingly enjoying the playful tension between them.
Description: A cheerful cartoon smiley face character dressed as a classic Wild West cowboy. The figure sports a tan cowboy hat, red shirt, blue bandana, and fringed chaps, while enthusiastically holding two silver revolvers pointed upward. The character appears to be in motion, possibly dancing or celebrating, with smoke puffs beneath its boots suggesting a quick draw or lively movement.
Description: CIPS Retro Sign - Electricity will kill you. A Parody of the CIPS central Illinois Public Service Co Reddy Kilowatt mascot. Cool, new, popular, recent, trending, top pick, best seller, top seller, editors pick, number 1 ranked, hot, recommended, liked, great artwork, t-shirt design, must-have, recommended choice, featured, All designs, best selling t-shirt graphics, best trending
Description: Reddy Kilowatt is a fictional character that acted as corporate spokesman for electricity generation in the United States and other countries for over seven decades. I wash and dry your clothes, play your radios, I can heat your coffee pot, I am always there, with lots of power to spare, ’cause I’m REDDY KILOWATT!
Description: By the mid-1920s, utilities had succeeded in bringing electricity to virtually all major cities and towns in the U.S.; however, rural areas remained chronically underserved. Convinced that the best way to win over frugal small business owners, skeptical farmers, and rural dwellers, was to give electricity a more human face, utility companies came up with Reddy Kilowatt. This cartoon character served as a corporate spokesman for electricity generation in the U.S. for seven decades. He is a stick figure whose body, limbs, and hair are made of stylized lightning-bolts and whose bulbous head has a light bulb for a nose and wall outlets for ears, and proudly announced that he was an "electrical servant."