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She’s an archeologist! (Egyptologist, actually)
(Can’t seem to break it out of its Facebook envelope)
(Can’t seem to break it out of its Facebook envelope)
I cheat with a few things, but they're hardly worth discussing. A few items, like my coffee maker, get too much use & I didn't want to risk breaking or wearing my 1940s ones for everyday use.
Exactly. Every day there are reports on how addictive and intrusive a lot of the new technologies are. My dial telephones don't record data, and they have such a satisfying clang and clunk when I hang up on someone. Not that I do that very often.
I think I've been on this forum about 7-8 years, and even in that time I've seen the drift away from the Golden Era toward -- I'm not sure what. Seems that many of the threads discuss everyday life in the twenty first century. Not complaining, just observing. I wish I knew whether there's some secret international sister-and-brotherhood of atavists!
I do like that percolator, by the way. Nice shape. I would try to set it up at night such that I could just plug it in & get it ready for the morning.
We had a really good thread on this many years ago, in which I pushed for the term "atavist" for someone who prefers to live in a generally-not-of-the-minute way. I wasn't thinking of clothes so much as general functionality -- avoiding the ultra-techie mode of the moment in favor of a more analog approach to living, and perhaps even, in the cases where the ultra-tech does manage to intrude, finding a way to subvert it. I used the way in which I use computers running itunes and radio automation software to feed AM radio transmitters as an example of such subverted technology.
My guess is that there's a lot fewer people around here interested in such things than there were ten years ago, given the Lounge's general drift away from its original 1930s-40s focus to whatever you'd call what it is today. But there are still a few of us hanging on. Some focus on a particular period, while others are just perfectly satisfied to keep doing things the way they always have. I for one don't see any way at all in which my life would be enriched by owning a refrigerator that dispenses water thru the door, so I'm perfectly happy sticking to the old Kelvinator for another thirty years or so. I'm not trying to recreate a period, I just live the way I'm comfortable living.
The kids are amazed by this, but they've also gotten used to it. I'm the only person any of them know who doesn't own any kind of a cellphone, and I think they consider that kind of an interesting curiosity more than anything else, like owning a chicken with two heads.
At a guess I would say that social media is one way of contacting and exchanging messages with like minded souls. It doesn't appeal to me but I do realise the power that social media has.When I tell my friends that there are other people around the world who live a mid-20th century way of life, they ask me whether this is a movement. I'm sure it isn't; after all, the more someone eschews modern technology, the less likely s/he is to connect up with others on a regular basis. I just wish I knew whether there is a way of contacting & talking to others who try to live this way.
We ought to have a radio show.
I plan on retiring in in a couple of years. My wife and I have been looking to relocate which means moving into a new house.
I am very much into genuine Victorian and Craftsman-style houses, the earlier in the 20th C, the better, especially if they haven't been updated.
When we look online (yes, I know) at these houses, and one pops up with original bathroom and/or kitchen fixtures and/or wall and/or floor 'subway' tiling, for example, our reactions couldn't be more different.
The rest of the house, though - she loves all the wood details that I do in these houses, so there's that.
She's the boss, though (because it's not worth the conversation/argument/fight), so I'll 'give' her the 'functional' rooms. But I want to keep the rest of the house as 'period' as I can.
As a longtime spectator from up in the cheap seats, I agree with St. Louis, LizzieMaine, and vitanola that there has been some sort of shift away from The Golden Era on the forum. While I do not collect and wear fedoras, or listen to recordings from the first couple of decades of the twentieth century, or wear clothing from those times, nonetheless I enjoy very much visiting the Lounge and following those who do. My particular favorite thread was What Are You Wearing Today, wherein I marveled at the amazing clothing some Loungers wore.Exactly. Every day there are reports on how addictive and intrusive a lot of the new technologies are. My dial telephones don't record data, and they have such a satisfying clang and clunk when I hang up on someone. Not that I do that very often.
I think I've been on this forum about 7-8 years, and even in that time I've seen the drift away from the Golden Era toward -- I'm not sure what. Seems that many of the threads discuss everyday life in the twenty first century. Not complaining, just observing. I wish I knew whether there's some secret international sister-and-brotherhood of atavists!
I do like that percolator, by the way. Nice shape. I would try to set it up at night such that I could just plug it in & get it ready for the morning.
As a longtime spectator from up in the cheap seats, I agree with St. Louis, LizzieMaine, and vitanola that there has been some sort of shift away from The Golden Era on the forum. While I do not collect and wear fedoras, or listen to recordings from the first couple of decades of the twentieth century, or wear clothing from those times, nonetheless I enjoy very much visiting the Lounge and following those who do. My particular favorite thread was What Are You Wearing Today, wherein I marveled at the amazing clothing some Loungers wore.
Why the gentle drift away from such a strong theme running through the forum? I don't know, but I hope it revives.
I would listen to a podcast for atavists ... in a New York Minute. As soon as someone explains it to me.