Sunny said:The fathest-along I've heard of are the fortunate few who live in period homes or farms. And even they don't usually dress that way, unless their jobs are doing historical interpretation. Their homes would probably look like period pieces, simply bcause of the gear they've accumulated. Things like oil/kerosene lamps, period dishware, woven coverlets (not quilts) on the beds, etc. This stuff costs a lot of money, and being able to use it for practical purposes in the present just makes sense.
The interesting thing about the really old stuff is how terribly practical it is. It was a huge, but freeing, mindset shift when I stopped asking myself, "How can do I this in a way that doesn't look anachronistic?" and started asking, "How did they do it?"
Yup. I grew up in an old farmhouse. The kitchen was heated by the cookstove (though the rest of the house was warmed by the coal-burning natural-draft furnace in the basement). There was always (from mid fall though mid spring) a kettle on the cookstove, so you had hot water whenever. There were gas burners and a gas oven as well, but stuff that just needed to simmer often was on the cookstove.
However, that house was drafty. I remember waking up one winter morning when I was a kid and seeing frost on the head of the bed.
Now it's nostalgic - then it was at times a bit miserable.