Newbie!
Let me take this thread as an opprotunity to jump in and introduce myself, and make a couple of comments. I've been fascinated by machines of all sorts since I was a very young boy, in the early 1960s (you do the math...). I've always thought of automatic washers and dryers, along with a bunch of the other household appliances that we take for granted now, as machines that are to be appreciated for their technology, engineering, and yes style, equally as much as automobiles or airplanes.
I'm a futurist, a person who very much looks forward to the future. What does that have to do with vintage appliances? Well, the mid-century period was a period when people looked forward to the future much more than most people do now. It was the period when technology first began making inroads into the average home, with the promise to make everyone's lives easier. And I don't think anyone could argue that the automatic washer and dryer did just that. It's a period that needs to be preserved. Maybe someday that world can get that feeling back again. Also, a technologist always has to be mindful of how we got to where we are today. It's important for the futurist to be aware of history, to be able to look back and see how the basic concepts and ideas for what we have now evoloved. In the last few weeks, I've really been poring over this site, and I've been absolutely fascinated. In the history of any technology, you can always find ideas that didn't work. You can also find ideas that were good ideas and did work, but were bypassed and forgotten anyway. That happens sometimes, and the person with a sense of history can sometimes go back and revive a forgotten idea and make a fortune by re-introducing it at a time when the public is ready to receive and appreciate it. I was rather stunned last week when I looked at the video clips of the early-model GE washer that one of posters here has put up (apologies for not remembering who right now). It actually has a lot of conceptual similarities to the GE Harmony washer that has recently taken up residence in our laundry room.
Danemodsandy, here's a data point for your conjecture: I was fortunate in that my parents never freaked out about my interest in washers and dryers. (Well, except when my mom got tired of me bugging her about why she never used the wash-n-wear cycle on the Kenmore... Hey, my philosophy was that if it was there, it was meant to be used!) My father was an engineer, and he shared my appreciation for machines and technology. Whenever one of the household appliances broke down, he'd let me help him fix it. Neither of my parents minded me wanting to play with the appliances and know how they worked. For one thing, sometimes I'd notice something wrong before either of them did. One thing that I kept an eye on was the mysterious water pipe that poked out through the garage wall that didn't seem to have any purpose. I watched and watched that pipe to see if water would ever come out of it. One day it did. When my dad got home from work, I asked him about it. You might have guessed it already: the pipe was from the T&P valve on the electric water heater. The thermostat contacts had welded. Mom opened the hot water tap in the kitchen and steam came out. Dad pulled the fuses, the water heater cooled down, and nothing bad happened. I got a lot of pats on the head for that.
Anyway, the point is that my parents understood my appreciation of the appliances. They never critized the activity as "girly", and if any of my other relatives did, they shielded me from it. Today, although I don't collect vintage appliances myself, I have an appreciation for people who do. I can repair any mechanical or electronic device in the house. And I'm happily married to a wonderful woman, and I rate a zero on the Kinsey scale. Cause and effect? Correlation? I leave that as an exercise to the reader.