Around here, I see far more younger folk wearing neckties and jackets than I do folks born before 1975. Older people seem to view suits and ties as something you suffer through the day in, so you can change into jeans or worse when you get home, whereas younger people seem to enjoy showing a...
Darn, I lost a whole reply.
Shaving-grade blades are still readily available at Walgreens and Rite Aid. Walmart doesn't carry SE blades, and Meijer (local equivalent to Walmart) devilishly carries hardware-grade blades in the toiletries section.
Walgreens carries GEM-brand blades, which...
Fellas, I’m not talking about a straight razor or an injector, but rather a single-edge safety razor.
I use a GEM Micromatic (Cost me $5.00 at an antique mall about four years ago):
Typically with Treet blades and C&O Bigelow shaving cream applied with a Burma Shave brush, FWIW.
-Dave
Is there no love for the Single Edge?
I read that excellent introduction to wetshaving that was posted, and I read a similar bunch of first-time-wetshaving FAQs on Badger and Blade recently, and both completely skipped over the SE to dive straight into DE territory.
I love my SE! Maybe...
I had a CD player in my last modern car, but the problem I found was that I never had with me the CDs I wanted. With my iPod (iPhone, actually), I can carry my entire music collection with me.
My Falcon has what appears to be a Mercury or Edsel radio in it. I haven't gotten it working yet...
Somewhere on the FM band. Wherever your MP3 player with the FM-broadcast device is tuned.
Finding good music is a major problem. With rare, and pleasant, exception, local radio isn't local anymore (aside from the advertisements), and it's all been programmed via focus group to hit the...
I make no claim to being an expert in vintage clothing, but I'll say that if I saw this photo in black-and-white, I would immediately assume it was taken in the '40s.
Looks good to me!
-Dave
Studebakers on the Rubicon Trail, c. 1920:
Cut-down ‘34 Ford in the Silver Lake Sand Dunes, c. 1940s-50s.
1929 Ford touring car in Great Britain, present day
Cut-down mid-1920s Ford roadster at the same event
Restored Ford Model A mail truck/snowmobile...
I agree. The HHR, PT Cruiser, and other attempts at “doing Golden Era” by the auto manufacturers leave me cold. No offense to the folks that like them, but to me they’re just caricatures.
In fact, I feel silly wearing a hat and driving my father-in-law’s lipstick-red HHR: It’s like I’m...
I’d like to solicit a recommendation from the balloonists for a decent-looking, good-quality headlight/taillight setup. Preferably one with a generator.
-Dave
I have an Esterbrook SJ, a Waterman Phineas, and a few Sheaffer No-Nonsense fountain pens. I also have a Sheaffer Prelude that I can’t locate at the moment (it’s probably in a jacket pocket, and I’ll find it in the fall). All are good writers.
The Prelude is my favorite writer, followed...
Parts Request: 1950s Ford passenger-car hubcaps
I am looking for a set of four center caps from a 1950s Ford passenger car. Driver quality:
I have a set of 1961 Galaxie 14-inch wheel covers to trade.
-Dave
Real estate prices are cheap enough right now, you could do a North Fedoraville and a South Fedoraville. Makes for a good excuse to build a railroad or interurban anyway.
-Dave
I met my wife on my first day at college - whilest wearing my pith helmet. It took me four years to win her over, but we've been happily married since September of '05.
She's not precisely vintage, but neither am I. She definitely loves vintage aprons and '50s houswife dresses, and doesn't...
See that's what I was afraid of. English changed and left me behind. The Wikipedia article for "Conical Asian hat" indicates several names for this hat, including the Chinese "dǒu lì" (bamboo hat) which I'm willing to bet was anglicized into "Coolie" and the widespread use of the dǒu lì hat...
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