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  #46  
Old 05-05-2010, 10:05 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by marty59 View Post
Doug, One other thing the Greater Chicagoland area has besides what you mentioned is lots of houses with basements! If the folks ever did any upgrades then the downstairs aquired the old stuff.

I remember the sixties style existing but the basement was stuck in the fifties with the old but still working blonde black and white and maybe a pooltable and a homebuilt bar!!
Another very good point. Almost all the homes in Chicago have basements and they are indeed the greatest catch all ever. Your typical chicagland basement:

Green 9x9 asbestos vinal floor tile, wood paneled walls, brass cone lights mounted to the walls, acoustic celing tiles with the little holes and the built in bar and sometimes a light up mural. Then the Zenith TV in the corner with books on top of it.

I can't tell you how many estate sales I've hit in which the 1968 Zenith TV was still upstairs, wired up to the outdoor antenna and plugged in.

I had depression era/WWII generation grandparents. They are gone now, but I remember very well how their house was back in the early 90's when I was a kid. They kept everything, the same 1950's furniture, the same avocado green carpeting, Ray Conniff and Ferrante and Teicher albums etc. Not to mention a basement full of just about everything you could imagine. They were your typical chicago area residents. People around here didn't feel the need to change for some reason. They must have liked what they had and life went on. And boom, 50 years later and its still the same thing just another day. Many parts of chicago and a good number of the suburbs still look like 1955, the old brick two flats many with the original businesses and the flashing neon signs. All you need are some 50's cars and you'd have a perfect 1950's movie set.

TV's and vintage things aside, I love the Chicago area and the architecutre and the history that goes along with it. Part of my enthusiasm for estate sales is just visting the homes and reflecting on the past. So much happened here once. It was a huge manufacturing hub, both for the electronics industry and for machines, tools, etc. Detroit built the cars, Chicago did just about everything else. Boths sides of my family were part of it, dating back to when they imigrated to Chicago from Germany. I have no plans to leave here.
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Last edited by drh4683; 05-05-2010 at 10:14 PM.
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  #47  
Old 05-05-2010, 10:26 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by drh4683 View Post
Your typical chicagland basement:

Green 9x9 asbestos vinal floor tile, wood paneled walls, brass cone lights mounted to the walls, acoustic celing tiles with the little holes and the built in bar and sometimes a light up mural. Then the Zenith TV in the corner with books on top of it.

I can't tell you how many estate sales I've hit in which the 1968 Zenith TV was still upstairs, wired up to the outdoor antenna and plugged in.
Sounds a lot like the suburbs in New Jersey. And I have a young-ish friend who is doing his new house in that style, only more "Disneyland perfect" than it ever was in real life. Complete with CTC-5. I just gave him my mom's old Mixmaster from the fifties which will look just right on his kitchen counter.
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  #48  
Old 05-05-2010, 10:36 PM
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i sold basement waterproofing here in columbus for some time.tile floors,paneling in the post war neighborhoods.saw lots of built in b/w sets.all were gutted with just the masking still mounted in the wall.when i got into the business years ago,i thought i would find lots of treasures.not one gem was found!seems all the children got the homes and got rid of those old ugly round screen tvs and bulky console radios.we gave them to the salvation army,etc.
what a disappointment this was.i did get a plasma from a customer who had good credit but no down payment.i took the set for the money down.sold it about a year later.other than that,no luck at all.could have got more than a few pianos.why would they take them downstairs?
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  #49  
Old 05-05-2010, 11:25 PM
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Originally Posted by drh4683 View Post
... Many parts of chicago and a good number of the suburbs still look like 1955, the old brick two flats many with the original businesses and the flashing neon signs. All you need are some 50's cars and you'd have a perfect 1950's movie set.

.
Yes, like old hwy 41 NE Chi, some amazing 50's originality/signage.
And then 5000 N Broadway for some 1920's immersion.
Must go there again for another Fix soon.
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  #50  
Old 05-06-2010, 12:38 AM
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Wow! Wow! Wow! Awsome set. You lucky fellow!
This tv was an luxury model?
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  #51  
Old 05-06-2010, 07:06 AM
DaveWM DaveWM is offline
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could have got more than a few pianos.why would they take them downstairs?
piano lessons?

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  #52  
Old 05-06-2010, 10:00 AM
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Originally Posted by drh4683 View Post

Ray Conniff and Ferrante and Teicher albums etc. Not to mention a basement full of just about everything you could imagine. They were your typical chicago area residents. People around here didn't feel the need to change for some reason.
That's most true in the inner-ring suburbs; Niles, Skokie, Berwyn, Cicero--the places where people were the first in their family to move out of the city. They found their dream home (the classic "raised ranch") and never changed. Up on the North Shore, they redecorated every few years, and had maids and cleaning women to give their old stuff to.
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  #53  
Old 05-06-2010, 10:34 AM
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That is true, here in the Lake Forest area it's pretty hard to find vintage things as they always have to have new. I was lucky when I got my CTC 5 Wingate from Wilmette Il for $22.50. That was a fluke because the people that lived there were there for generations and kept everything like in the other suburbs. The rest of the neighborhood and area was pretty updated.
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  #54  
Old 05-06-2010, 11:49 AM
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Originally Posted by zenithfan1 View Post
That is true, here in the Lake Forest area it's pretty hard to find vintage things as they always have to have new. I was lucky when I got my CTC 5 Wingate from Wilmette Il for $22.50. That was a fluke because the people that lived there were there for generations and kept everything like in the other suburbs. The rest of the neighborhood and area was pretty updated.
I remember that house. It did have a "Grey Gardens" vibe about it. Every once in a while you find a house where something clearly went very wrong at some point. Not that they kept things the same because they like them but because they were mentally or financially incapable of change.

Geez, this is really straying off topic. Sorry; will ramble no more.
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