Diamondback
I'll Lock Up
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Have any idea how difficult it would be to start up a B-17 or a PBY Catalina without 'em? If you did, you might reconsider...
Diamondback said:Have any idea how difficult it would be to start up a B-17 or a PBY Catalina without 'em? If you did, you might reconsider...
LizzieMaine said:How about only allowing cars that'll start if you roll them down a hill and pop the clutch?
Diamondback said:Have any idea how difficult it would be to start up a B-17 or a PBY Catalina without 'em? If you did, you might reconsider...
Shangas said:Does our vintage town have a bakery? I just made a double-batch of shortbread cookies which are, if I say so myself...excellent! If there's a bakery in town, I might volunteer there once a week and help out.
...I wonder what kinds of food would be served in vintage restaurants, cafes, bakeries, delicatessens, butchers and so-forth? What would the diet of our Vintage Town be like?
"Vecchia was not a caterer, he was The Caterer of Zenith. Most coming-out parties were held in the white and gold ballroom of Maison Vecchia; at all the nice teas the guests recognized the five kinds of Vecchia sandwiches and the seven kinds of Vecchia cakes; and all really smart dinners ended, as on a revolving chord, in Vecchia Neapolitan ice cream in one of the three reliable molds -- the melon mold, the round mold like a layer cake, and the long brick.
Vecchia's shop had pale blue woodwork, tracery of plaster roses, attendants in frilled aprons, and glass shelves of "kisses" with all the refinement that inheres in whites of eggs."
Babbitt by Sinclair Lewis (1922)
V.C. Brunswick said:Quirky tourist attractions such as a World's Biggest Ball of String, monuments to obscure, eccentric local heroes (preferably one who died in a freak accident), The Seven Wonders of the World reproduced in our town's most famous product, a museum dedicated to the history of salad bowls, or an Eiffel Tower made out of toothpicks.
W4ASZ said:Is the overall concept of the Vintage Town to have only vintage things within its corporate limits, or is the consensus that it should be more of a reverse Potemkin village with hidden, more modern features ?
I'm enjoying all of this.
jamespowers said:Only vintage with a minimal amount of modern hidden.
LizzieMaine said:Indeed. If we're just a vintage veneer on a modern core, we're nothing but a theme park.
Maybe what we need for those who insist on modernity is a theme park outside town -- call it, oh, "The World Of Tomorrow," and charge a steep admission to get in. Or even better, let them in for free and charge them twenty bucks a head to get out.
V.C. Brunswick said:Here's a description of what one such establishment might look like.