Want to buy or sell something? Check the classifieds
  • The Fedora Lounge is supported in part by commission earning affiliate links sitewide. Please support us by using them. You may learn more here.

Vintage Interiors

ChazfromCali

One of the Regulars
Messages
126
Location
Tijuana / Rosarito

Those pic's remind me of time spent with my grandfather in about 1995. He had a knack of knowing where these roadside places were. I suppose he had been going to some of them since the 30's or 40's. I was helping my grandparents move and being the practical rancher/farmer he was, he put all their furniture in his horse-trailer and had me drive it to their new place out near Stockton, Cal. A small town called Banta. We made two trips that day and I remember the pleasure of just sitting in a roadside diner with him having lunch. My family was never close so it meant a lot to me... just one of those moments.
 

2jakes

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,680
Location
Alamo Heights ☀️ Texas
Those pic's remind me of time spent with my grandfather in about 1995. He had a knack of knowing where these roadside places were. I suppose he had been going to some of them since the 30's or 40's. I was helping my grandparents move and being the practical rancher/farmer he was, he put all their furniture in his horse-trailer and had me drive it to their new place out near Stockton, Cal. A small town called Banta. We made two trips that day and I remember the pleasure of just sitting in a roadside diner with him having lunch. My family was never close so it meant a lot to me... just one of those moments.

On weekends I would go with my father to
help collect the empty glass soda bottles.
He worked for the Seven-Up bottling company.
I wasn’t too keen on going, I preferred to
watch the Saturday morning cartoons.
But I did as I was told. Not out of fear of
being punished, it was simply doing what
my folks said.
I remember going to the local diners
for lunch where my dad would treat me
to the best fried fish or chicken plate.
I enjoyed the few times we spent together.
 
Messages
13,469
Location
Orange County, CA
Silent film star William S. Hart's mansion in Newhall, California which has been preserved as a museum.

GPF.8260-Hart-House-Interior-Living-Rm.jpg


william-s-hart-museum.jpg


william-s-hart-museum.jpg
 

3fingers

One Too Many
Messages
1,797
Location
Illinois
Silent film star William S. Hart's mansion in Newhall, California which has been preserved as a museum.

GPF.8260-Hart-House-Interior-Living-Rm.jpg


william-s-hart-museum.jpg


william-s-hart-museum.jpg
That's really cool but I have to wonder how many people outside of Fedora Lounge members and those of similar interests know who William S. Hart was. I would guess attractions of that type have a rapidly shrinking customer base.
 
Messages
17,220
Location
New York City
That's really cool but I have to wonder how many people outside of Fedora Lounge members and those of similar interests know who William S. Hart was. I would guess attractions of that type have a rapidly shrinking customer base.

I agree and, sadly, that is part of the reason so many of these "niche" museums are struggling - their customer base is getting older / passing away and there's nothing to spark interest in the next generation.
 
Messages
10,940
Location
My mother's basement
That's really cool but I have to wonder how many people outside of Fedora Lounge members and those of similar interests know who William S. Hart was. I would guess attractions of that type have a rapidly shrinking customer base.

Hell, I didn’t know who William S. Hart was until Brunswick’s post piqued my curiosity. And I ain’t exactly a spring chicken. I doubt if my dear old (quite old) ma could tell you who he was, either.
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,766
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
I agree and, sadly, that is part of the reason so many of these "niche" museums are struggling - their customer base is getting older / passing away and there's nothing to spark interest in the next generation.

I feel bad for the tiny little town of Pine Ridge Arkansas, which essentially exists solely because of "Lum and Abner." The only attraction there is the Lum and Abner Museum, and when decreasingly few people have any idea who they were, there isn't much else there to attract traffic.

StoreOptimized.jpg


ftsmith_042.jpg
 
Messages
17,220
Location
New York City
Here we have a museum room, which was transplanted from an apartment building at 525 Park Avenue in New York.

View attachment 122238 View attachment 122241 View attachment 122242 View attachment 122244

The room was designed in 1928 by the French firm of Alvoine, and installed in this 1915 vintage building in 1929. The firm decorated the balance of the apartment in a more conservative Louis XVI style. The owner donated this room to the Brooklyn Museum in 1971. He continued to live in that apartment until his death in 1989. Since then all traces of the 1929 decoration have been removed. The former library, which is now used as a dining room, is by far the most interesting, character -rich space in the unit, and that is not saying much.

View attachment 122245

The above represents the current taste of the current masters of the universe. I weep for the future.

I walked by 525 Park yesterday and snapped these (sunlight, shadows and traffic were a bit of a challenge).
IMG_5197.JPG IMG_5198.JPG IMG_5199.JPG
 

2jakes

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,680
Location
Alamo Heights ☀️ Texas
View attachment 132025 View attachment 132026 View attachment 132027 View attachment 132028 View attachment 132029 View attachment 132030 View attachment 132031 Above are some English studies of room designs dating to the late 1920s suggesting the uses of British made cretonnes in cottage decoration. I find most of these rooms to be quite inviting and eminently homelike.

I once had my '67 beetle seat upholstered
with similar floral pattern.
A1C017F3-4F3D-4D44-B609-45D270ABACC8.jpeg

Nobody liked it except Polo! :(
 

Forum statistics

Threads
109,307
Messages
3,078,508
Members
54,244
Latest member
seeldoger47
Top