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... Notably, this is an isue for the film and TV industry; those who scout for period cars to appear in productions are often frustrated by the bulk of what is offered being like-new, showroom-fresh when what they really need is an MG Magnette or a MKII Ford that looks like a family car that's been looked after, but is a decade or so old. (Not unlike the old interior decor difference between 'real' homes of 1958, and the wholly MCM Ideal Home Show version....). … ).
A friend since my teen years (who succumbed to AIDS in 1995) was an old-car enthusiast with a particular fondness for Packards. After high school he moved to New Jersey for a couple-three years to take a job with a vintage car parts business. He told of being on crews of drivers who shuttled vintage vehicles to and from NYC to park on the streets for film and TV shoots. He also spoke of what he called "over-restored" cars, cars with hardware and especially finishes superior to what the vehicles had when they rolled off the assembly lines. He wasn't necessarily critical of the practice, just as he wasn't necessarily critical of heavily modified old cars. But in either case, originality is lost.
As to "the wholly MCM Ideal Home" of 2019 …
Yeah, no foolin'. The interiors in particular seen in today's MCM design rags scarcely resemble even the high-style mod interiors of 50 and 60 years ago. It isn't that some of the new stuff isn't nice, but the "updates" will themselves be dated in a decade or two. Here in God's Country, billions are spent annually on residential remodels, the overwhelming majority of which are far from necessary.
And don't get me started on the architectural sins committed daily on HGTV and the like.