Vintage 40s and 50s reproduction shoes

remix-vintage-40s-shoes

A girl can never, ever have too many shoes. Now, to alternate with my reissued vintage PF Flyers, I neeeeeeeed these:  ReMix Vintage Shoes — actual reproductions from the 1940s and 1950s. There are oodles of styles and colors available – for men, too. Heck yeah there is more →

More photos from Alice – a Retro Renovation re-run

Remember Alice and her yellow Geneva kitchen in Richmond, Virginia? We’ve stayed in touch, and she sent some additional photos of her time capsule house. Heck yeah there is more →

Life in the 1950s…through today

life-in-the-1950s

The editors at Women’s Day (which I grew up reading religiously) have put together a very interesting visual timeline covering live in the 1950s…to today. Did you know that the average house size in the 50s was 983 s.f. — and that today, it’s 2,349 s.f.? TV watching per household: 4 hrs 31 minutes then… 8 hrs 14 min now. And that today, we spend 41% of our food budget away from home? Oh – and notice, the decades are defined not only by photos and statistics, but by wallpaper of the era, too. :)   See the complete timeline here.

Replacement parts for a bathroom faucet or toilet

Kelly recently bought a 1963 home in Phoenix, and asked for help finding replacement parts for her 60s bathroom faucet. Heck yeah there is more →

A 1953 midcentury modern time capsule in Los Angeles

1953-midcentury-modern-home-bathroom-eugene-kinn-choy

SHAUN SPOTTED THIS WONDERFUL TIME CAPSULE, a 1953 home built by architect Eugene Kinn Choy in the Los Angeles foothills. The house, which is currently for sale, is large and expensive by most standards, but even so, I think that there are a lot of design touches on the interior that provide ideas for a retro renovation on any budget. In fact, the more that I look at this house, the more that I love its unpretentiousness. The new American dream, perhaps? Heck yeah there is more →

18 kitchens, bathrooms and bedrooms from 1949

1949-simmons-hide-a-bed

IN 1949, home interiors generally seemed to have a traditional look, and featured a soft and pretty palette, some jewel tones carried over from glamorous Hollywood, and of course, red-white-and-blue in the kitchens. Several of these images also suggest farmhouses and updating of older homes was a marketing focus — the Armstrong “Monowalls,” for example, are meant to cover failing plaster walls, I believe. Also, you don’t see much emphasis on technology — there a very few gizmos in the kitchen. In the bathroom — well, I think that many families were still getting their first bathroom.  And in the image above, the happy couple are multitasking that Simmons hide-a-bed, suggesting that this is a one-room apartment — something I think was pretty common due to a severe post-war housing shortage. In 1949 it didn’t take much to make us happy. We were still ramping up to our 1950s frenzy and the true launch of Consumer America. Click through for a slide show of  kitchens, bathrooms, bedrooms and more – 18 images in all.

Cheryl Wheeler sings “Estate Sale”


WELL, THIS SONG GETS RIGHT DOWN to brass tacks and sums estate sales right up. I hereby declare it, the new Retro Renovation anthem. Long live, Cheryl Wheeler! So…what did you all find in all the drawers and trunks and closets (and thrift stores, Re-Stores, ebay, craigslist, etsy) this weekend?

Retro Roadtrip: El Rancho Motel, Gallup, NM

el-rancho-hotel-gallup

Maryanne contributes this classic and unforgettable spot to our list of retro roadtrips: The El Rancho Motel in Gallup, New Mexico. I can second that emotion, because I’ve also stayed there twice, although nearly 20 years ago. It was incredible – all the rooms are named after cinema cowboys… the lobby is wonderful beyond belief… and tell me, are the enchiladas still as good? Thanks, Maryanne!