This is what happens when you can't say no...

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elginkid

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 30, 2006
Messages
163
Location
Cincinnati, OH
Naturally, we all have this problem. Things follow you home. You don't necessarily need it, certainly not right away. But it's there, and it's cheap, and suddenly you look around and you wonder what happened. I was cleaning the basement tonight, and I started arranging stuff, and I figured I'd take pictures and make a few people feel better about themselves, and their sickness.

elginkid++1-19-2010-00-48-56.jpg
 
I figured I'd take pictures and make a few people feel b

Thanks, I really needed that. No joke!

I don't see treasures piled from floor to ceiling, so you've got a ways to go before calling it a sickness ;)
 
Wesley:

You have an unusual assortment of things there, but you are a very long way from being any kind of hoarder. There's not a problematic quantity, just some odd stuff being held by someone who likes old things and has some room to put them aside. I've seen much more - and much stranger - on people's carports.

You want a reputation as a hoarder, you're going to have to do way better than that. ;-)
 
Its not a sickness!

Its a passion!

Which can be approached from so many angles:
A love of retro styling
An interest in engineering - both in old design and keeping interesting mechanical "soultions" in good working order
Sociological changes in the home in the 20th century
Sentimental value of machines we grew up with
Being "green" by using still servicable if old (a bit like myself really!) products rather than send them to land fill.
The passing on of knowledge and skills to new generations

It is a delight to stop by places like AW.org and typically see a historical threads from the last 60 years (and sometimes older) restored and WORKING and not just like in a museum where items generally stand inanimate. There are so many wonderful examples of machines which are still with us, which otherwise would be totally lost - living on only in vague memory and pictures in books.

So yes, I say its a passion, and a good one at that!
Al

PS I would LOVE a basement too (at least 6'5" high please) and there looks to be some interesting sanitary ware there as well - I like the wash basin with the "column" support
 
Whats up with that 'Camair" DC-4/C-54 in a bastardized old UAL color scheme? And whatever that is up high against the ceiling with the red nacelles. Has a nose like a Connie, but all Connie's had three-blade props.
 
I don't think you have anything to worry about, Wesley. Seeing that you live in a Victorian home, I'm sure that quite alot of this will be used in your restoration efforts. You're a long way from being classified as a hoarder.
 
The DC-4 came from a travel agency from the 1940`s don`t know why they picked the paint scheme though as it is obviously confusing .

The other planes are battery operated Douglas DC-7`s from the 1950`s - some time in there early life kids broke off the 4 bladed props transforming them into 2 bladers :)

Sure wish they had made battery operated Douglas DC-6`s as those are my favorite airplanes.

Thanks
 
The Show "Hoarders"!

Now, the people who they showcase weekly have an illness. I've seen the show once or twice at a friends house, and I can thank God I wasn't eating when they brought up the topic of what they found or what the house or apartment reeked of! YEEESH!
 
This is AFTER cleaning! There is a matching table to the three dinette chairs. (A nice garbage find, as was the canister vacuum) When I started, there was a path to the laundry, well, I hesitate to call it a room, more like a laundry laboratory, and no path to the furnace room. I have a lot or architectural salvage (which includes the matching seafoam green bathtub) that's still stored at my parents'home. (They're thrilled, no doubt) In addition to the 20 bicycles, and 40 odd sewing machines, et cetera. that have followed me home over the years. :)
 
There are still homes in the area with those Crane (I think) sinks with the cast-in spout for the water. I saw that style with the matching toilet and tub in green and the bath was so well cared for that it still looked new.
 

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