Meet the woman who looks like she's walked straight out the 1940s | SWNS

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  • Опубликовано: 26 янв 2025

Комментарии • 445

  • @hectormanuel9793
    @hectormanuel9793 11 месяцев назад +212

    Have a friend that lives the same way, his home is a trip back to the 1940s and 50s and it's the most comforting place I visit! The few things that belie all of that is the blu-ray player and his collection of films and tv shows on discs but those are in a closet and not in view to visitors. He only has a computer at work but not in the home, his cell phone is left in the car and only calls or answers calls in his vintage home phone. He buys magazines from that era with no names or addresses attached in excellent condition and buys books that were published and read in that time, also, in excellent condition. He doesn't smoke and thats an improvement over that time, but as he says, growing up in the 60s, my parents were not smokers, so it's not different in this regard. It's beautiful home and nicely kept, too!

    • @nuttybar9
      @nuttybar9 8 месяцев назад +5

      Maybe you should introduce him to her.

    • @llllllllllllllllllllllllll9211
      @llllllllllllllllllllllllll9211 8 месяцев назад

      What nonsense

    • @carriageofnoreturn.1881
      @carriageofnoreturn.1881 3 дня назад

      Regarding your friend’s telephone: point him towards the LiGo BluWave units - they allow you to have an old phone plugged into them, but then as long as his mobile phone is within range all of the calls from his mobile will go in/out via the old phone. He could hide the gubbins in a cupboard!

  • @misssmith7225
    @misssmith7225 9 месяцев назад +286

    This is a _home_ . There is a feeling of comfort, warmth, safety - everywhere. Lovely.

  • @Eric-jo8uh
    @Eric-jo8uh 9 месяцев назад +303

    As long as she’s happy, LEAVE HER ALONE. Who is qualified to judge anyway?

    • @Couldhavebeensomeone
      @Couldhavebeensomeone 9 месяцев назад +22

      This is celebrating her you nob

    • @Roddy556
      @Roddy556 8 месяцев назад +11

      Yeah it's a human interest piece not a hit piece 🙄

    • @ellielovesbands
      @ellielovesbands 8 месяцев назад +4

      The best comment I found in this comment section! Cheers!

    • @michelles2299
      @michelles2299 7 месяцев назад +7

      I can't see any negative comments?

    • @coffeepot3123
      @coffeepot3123 5 месяцев назад +4

      I have a diploma in judgelomity from the university of dim!!..

  • @dresqueda
    @dresqueda 9 месяцев назад +169

    Born in 55, I grew up with houses that actually looked like this. I get a great deal of comfort in that environment. And, the big band sounds were still being played when I was young. Great lifestyle. Thanks for sharing.

    • @outfromtheshadows
      @outfromtheshadows 8 месяцев назад +5

      Born in 59 and this house reminds me of my grandparents’ house, lovely memories. 😊

    • @ConfusedFlowerPot-ds3gy
      @ConfusedFlowerPot-ds3gy 8 месяцев назад +5

      I always have so much respect for how respectful and cordial older folks are when using the internet. This comment feels so thoughtful and genuinely almost formal, and in an age when formality is thrown out the window, that feels very nice.

    • @garyhoneybuss6965
      @garyhoneybuss6965 5 месяцев назад +2

      I was born in 1958 And I agree I miss that look

    • @nettyferguson4874
      @nettyferguson4874 3 месяца назад

      ​@@garyhoneybuss6965and me

  • @andreas.6303
    @andreas.6303 Год назад +199

    I totally understand where she is coming from, if my husband were a bigger fan, our whole house would be outfitted in the 1950s.

    • @newbeginnings10
      @newbeginnings10 Год назад +24

      I am an 18th Century Living Historian and would have my home completely decorated Primitive Colonial if I could convince my husband to go along with it!

  • @nessedian
    @nessedian Год назад +248

    this is kind of inspiration we need on social media :)

    • @brotherofjunk
      @brotherofjunk 9 месяцев назад +2

      is it?

    • @Sectia11Psihiatrie
      @Sectia11Psihiatrie 9 месяцев назад

      Minți, fai pleavo

    • @kodokoa
      @kodokoa 9 месяцев назад

      why?

    • @abigailandmoongarden
      @abigailandmoongarden 8 месяцев назад +5

      She has a podcast called Make Do and Mend? if you need more content!

    • @ConnieHeartsValentino
      @ConnieHeartsValentino 6 месяцев назад

      @@abigailandmoongarden I've listened to one of her episodes and it's Fantastic! Truly recommend!

  • @Dcs.234
    @Dcs.234 Год назад +66

    Oh god I remember that teapot from the 1960s we had one…live with the things that make you happy and don’t take any notice of what others think

    • @robertstorey7476
      @robertstorey7476 8 месяцев назад +1

      Yes they were a very common design. You often see them in TV programmes from that era.

  • @papermason
    @papermason 9 месяцев назад +33

    This house feels like a big hug!!! I love it, it's just beautiful. Greetings from Canada!!!

  • @alexandradane3672
    @alexandradane3672 9 месяцев назад +63

    Something “ strangely” reassuring and solid about this , I think it’s wonderful !

  • @nickyburkard4573
    @nickyburkard4573 9 месяцев назад +87

    What an absolute sweetheart, I love this house and her resourcefulness! Well done lady!

  • @CharlotteIssyvoo
    @CharlotteIssyvoo 9 месяцев назад +36

    My story is quite similar. I was poor through much of my childhood, and then moved out at 17 and was very poor for a very long time. Everything I owned was second hand or from the trash, and I came to have a real love of older design styles. My husband and I were recently finally able to buy a house, a 1928, Craftsman bungalow with most of its original details intact. It's only natural to want to decorate and furnish it in a way that brings it back to how it might have originally looked. We're not as all-out about it as this woman is. We have computers and such, and don't forgo the modern conveniences we want (like stair lifts for me because I'm disabled). But there definitely is a bit of a sense of walking into time warp in this house. It becomes a kind of escapism, not really to the past (which no more perfect that today) so much as simply out of the present, like sinking into a good old novel. It's really lovely.

  • @christianbrother4724
    @christianbrother4724 Год назад +57

    My parents were born and were kids in 30s and 40s. However, with the depression and war, it was not a happy time. However, the clothes, music and movies were beautiful.

    • @itravisoni
      @itravisoni Год назад +4

      Everyone was going through the same situations at this time if You grew up in the 30s and 40s. It's their parents who had it rough.

    • @MsRosieA
      @MsRosieA Год назад +9

      ⁠@@itravisoniNot true. Tough times, heartache and tragedy were not just reserved for the parents. Many children suffered too.

    • @itravisoni
      @itravisoni Год назад +1

      @@MsRosieA All kids unless rich had the same problems. Their Dad's were working and brought in food. It wasn't like living in the 1970s but it wasn't like poverty.

    • @silvermoonravenwolf
      @silvermoonravenwolf Год назад +11

      @@itravisoni "The great depression and WW2 weren't like living in poverty" For the love of god please pick up a history textbook. Kids suffered during that time as much as adults they didn't live in a bubble where no outside forces can affect them. There are documented effects of growing up in that era.
      The primary effects for children of the American Great Depression of the 1920s and 1930s were hard labor, malnutrition and hunger, and displacement. Many young people also developed emotional and psychological problems as a result of living in constant uncertainty and seeing their families in hardship. The difficult working conditions of this period meant that many children were orphaned, too, and orphans were often left to fend for themselves, even at very young ages. Many of the children who survived this period grew into very frugal adults who placed a profound emphasis on saving and education as if to keep the experiences of their growing-up years from repeating.
      Desolate families often had no choice but to put their children to work to help earn money. Sometimes kids accompanied their parents peddling goods or tending fields, but other times they worked more or less independently, doing manual labor and working long, grueling hours. In most cases, children were pulled out of school, often at the elementary level, in order to help their families get by. The United States today has rather rigorous laws preventing child labor and requiring education up to a certain point, but these laws did not exist at the time of the Depression. In many cases, the young people who left school to work never went back, even after the economy stabilized.
      Many children of the Great Depression were malnourished and ill. Food was sparse, and the things that were available often lacked the protein, vitamins, and minerals that growing children need to thrive. Almost all laborers in this period went to bed hungry, though the impacts were perhaps the harshest for the very young, whose growth and development in many ways depends on solid nutrition.
      Rather than watch their children starve, many families elected to send children to various relatives or friends in other places. Sometimes this was done out of a hope of a better existence, but in many cases it was simply to have one less mouth to feed. Children who were displaced or sent away from their parents and siblings often felt profoundly isolated, and many did not understand why they could not remain at home. This was particularly true when some, but not all, children were relocated. Those forced to leave often resented those who were allowed to stay, particularly if they perceived their new circumstances to be harsher.
      During the Great Depression, many children were left orphaned as their parents succumbed to illness, died of injuries sustained at the workplace, or starved. This led to what later became known as the plight of the Orphan Train children. A number of labor organizers made it a practice to essentially round up orphans who were otherwise destitute and fending for themselves, then move them to rural farm areas where they were forced to do rigorous farm work in exchange for room and board. Most of these arrangements were passed off as voluntary, but the children involved rarely had all of the information before agreeing to go and in most cases they worked essentially as indentured servants. They received no pay for their work, and many who tried to leave were told that they had to work longer to pay off the debt the landowners had incurred to pay for their shelter.
      Orphaned children who endured these living circumstances for long stretches often found themselves in desperate situations as they grew into adulthood. Some went on to lead happy and prosperous lives, but many also ran away from their labor farms as they approached their teenage years only to become involved in criminal activities. Some resorted to armed robbery and prostitution, while others spent years imprisoned for committing felonies.
      Other elements that affected children of the Great Depression were fear and psychological depression. As the relentless pressure of work with little reward continued, many saw little hope at home. In many cases, these emotional tolls lasted well into adulthood. Some children who were exhausted from their daily routine of laborious work ran away and hopped aboard railroad trains and boxcars, and a number died in accidents as a result or else ended up on orphan labor farms when they hit a point of desperation along their trek.
      Most of the children who survived the Depression years carried the scars of the era well into adulthood, and many even to death. These people tend to be very frugal, and often focus intently on saving. Many have a hard time throwing almost anything away, possibly out of fear that it may one day become useful or direly needed. It is also common for many to put a big focus on education, especially when it comes to university training.

    • @IchigoOren
      @IchigoOren Год назад +1

      ​@@itravisoni You don't make any sense.

  • @lennicorser2553
    @lennicorser2553 11 месяцев назад +10

    Delightful!! Thank you for sharing.

  • @JixieDyeAuthor
    @JixieDyeAuthor Год назад +65

    I split my time between dressing in 1940's and 50's styles and Victorian styles. I love both for different reasons.
    40's and 50's makes me feel kind of elegant, and I do enjoy the music of the time. I love a bit of George formby lol. But the Victorian era has always been my favourite period of history, even as a little girl, and dressingg myself in those fashions almost makes me feel like I've achieved a dream.

    • @Dcs.234
      @Dcs.234 Год назад +5

      I love the clothes from the 1950s but then I was born in 52

    • @JixieDyeAuthor
      @JixieDyeAuthor Год назад +7

      @@Dcs.234 50's clothes are beautiful, it's true.

    • @josephhoag2366
      @josephhoag2366 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@Dcs.234 Generally, men looked more dignified and women looked more elegant. I remember those times.....Carla H.
      -

    • @cessnaverdi
      @cessnaverdi 16 дней назад

      Me, too! I'm torn between the 1940s and the 1880s! 😅

  • @EricLehner
    @EricLehner Год назад +33

    Hello from Canada. Bless you for having the spirit to activate this lifestyle, and sharing it with us. Cheers.

  • @lilyandrose8557
    @lilyandrose8557 Год назад +242

    Good for her, she looks so happy & content. I hope she finds a gramophone!

  • @deforestbearse3136
    @deforestbearse3136 Год назад +72

    I adore this home and way of life.

  • @ibislife
    @ibislife Год назад +67

    I wish we got to see more of her house 🙂

    • @BettaChristina
      @BettaChristina 2 месяца назад +1

      She's on RUclips, Realvintagedollshouse.

    • @ibislife
      @ibislife Месяц назад +1

      @@spirals73-s4c Thank you, I know now, I follow her. Very nice channel.

  • @Simzoid
    @Simzoid Год назад +62

    Good on her. Life with passion and purpose. Good to see.

  • @rayderry7068
    @rayderry7068 Год назад +21

    This is lovely video, just because we have all mods and cons doesn't make living more interesting, this is a passion for you , I can see the beauty in this, love the Era, good on you !

  • @anonymousr1918
    @anonymousr1918 Год назад +187

    I wish there were more women like her. God bless her.

    • @aussiejubes
      @aussiejubes Год назад +3

      Why?

    • @LisaMarin-zr8jt
      @LisaMarin-zr8jt Год назад +23

      @@aussiejubesshes Well behaved. Not something you see nowadays

    • @aussiejubes
      @aussiejubes Год назад

      @LisaMarin-zr8jt mmm. Women and children should definitely be well behaved, obedient & powerless against men. Their duty is to serve. They have no other purpose.

    • @mrtunasandwhich6799
      @mrtunasandwhich6799 Год назад +11

      @@LisaMarin-zr8jt many women are well behaved lol who are you seeing???

    • @shaylawatson1244
      @shaylawatson1244 Год назад +6

      You must like old fashion women

  • @eddieday-reilly5144
    @eddieday-reilly5144 Месяц назад +5

    This is a REAL home. Warm and cosy. Comfortable. Something the modern home doesn't have. Real fires and gas cooking. Real, solid wooden furniture has character and history.
    It's nice to see someone else who likes the lifestyle.

  • @sandranelson7124
    @sandranelson7124 Год назад +42

    (This is Tom, not Sandra.)
    I love this video. She is quite attractive and l love the 40's and 50's lifestyle she is living. ( I, myself, was born in the late '50's. ) I can appreciate her wanting to "live in the past", as they say. Heck, it was a whole lot better back then than what's going on today!!!! More power to her!!! Thank you for posting this video, Mam. (Tom)

  • @chrisblenkinsopp8588
    @chrisblenkinsopp8588 Год назад +159

    I love your house. I was born in the 40's so it's quite normal looking to me. If I had a gramaphone, I would give it to you...x

  • @tinterlight-iz5tl
    @tinterlight-iz5tl Год назад +17

    Love her and her amazing home!!

  • @ATLcentury334
    @ATLcentury334 9 месяцев назад +11

    Our house is decorated in 1920’s, 30’s, 40’s style. Many years ago when my husband and I first moved in together, we had a large Christmas party every year in our tiny bungalow. Everyone crowded into the kitchen, fascinated by all the kitchen gadgets, especially our 1940’s advance design Philco fridge. We used all our depression glass and Chase chrome pieces. We also began collecting 1930’s Christmas boxes with art deco graphics on them. We’d arrange all the boxes with bows on them under our decorated tree. All of the glass decorations on the tree were collections from both our folks and grandmothers. We could only invite so many people to the party because our home was so small, so we rotated the guest list every year. We would use the art work from an art deco Christmas card from our collection for our invitation. Everyone loved exploring our house, it was always a fun party

  • @RonMaxfield
    @RonMaxfield Год назад +32

    I was born in 54 and I've always been intrigued with the 1940's era. Maybe, it was because, when I was a child the 1940s way of life and styles was still around. This lady is really neet. I guess when she leaves her house to go somewhere it's like going back to the future. 🤔. Thank you ma'am I really enjoyed your video. Now, to me she looks a lot like Judy Garland when she was that age.

  • @shorty332
    @shorty332 Год назад +85

    I would love your home. I hate modern homes look so uncomfortable

    • @MargaretMcLaughlin-c7d
      @MargaretMcLaughlin-c7d 8 месяцев назад +3

      Solid and reassuringly comfortable. Nothing digital or "Smart" and not a single App in sight. Very relaxing.😊

  • @shaportueng7156
    @shaportueng7156 8 месяцев назад +2

    I love your beautiful home. It’s so nostalgic. It makes me think of my grandparents as well. My grandfather loved old clocks. I also enjoyed your story of how you came to love this era. Thanks for showing us your home!

  • @elainaworsley470
    @elainaworsley470 Год назад +7

    I'm with you on all this. I love your home.

  • @valerieg.writer
    @valerieg.writer Год назад +37

    I love this. I’m writing a novel set in Britain during WW2 ... this is enchanting. Just fabulous

    • @incorrigiblycuriousD61
      @incorrigiblycuriousD61 Год назад +3

      I don't mean to mansplain, but I've watched a lot of bbc first person accounts of ww2 and read uk people's unedited pov in bbc people's war just in case you didn't know. Amazing stuff. Wishing all the success on your novel!

  • @Mr.SLovesTheSacredHeartofJesus
    @Mr.SLovesTheSacredHeartofJesus Год назад +20

    Funny, my house is pretty much like hers. Just, i inherited the majority of my household from relatives.

  • @deborahjane68
    @deborahjane68 2 месяца назад +2

    Love It. Thank You For Sharing

  • @ianmurphy9955
    @ianmurphy9955 Год назад +10

    Everyone wants everything now now now, patience has eroded in this modern life, this is amazing to see

  • @JessiexXxX
    @JessiexXxX 9 месяцев назад +4

    We have a pellet stove in our house, it broke but I looked up how to fix it. It has saved us multiple times when the power has gone out keeping the house warm. Also just in the winter in general we barely use the house heat because the pellet stove with the fan on does such a good job.

  • @victrolalover7795
    @victrolalover7795 Год назад +12

    Gramophones, or by the 30s and 40s, Victrolas (by the early 20s machines with hidden horns or Victrolas were standard, though the name "Victrola" is a patent of Victor Talking Machine Co. Most people use it as a general term for internal horn gramophones.) are not hard to find if you know where to look. almost all need to be restored though (unless you purchase a restored one) I learned how to restore their insides myself through youtube and now have a small collection, I hope a wonderful victrola comes your way soon!

    • @ismulniir
      @ismulniir Год назад +3

      i got one for aorund 40 bucks locally, they're pretty common to see in norway

  • @stephaniehall3798
    @stephaniehall3798 Год назад +22

    Beautiful girl and beautiful home x

  • @togerdupree3679
    @togerdupree3679 Месяц назад +4

    She obviously puts a lot of thought in her purchases. It's not just mindless hoarding, she actually uses the things she buys and keeps them clean and organized. Well done, she's living her dream life 😊
    Also, things that were made in the 50s or 40s or even earlier, are far more superior than the ones we have now. Many vintage and antique house wares were built to last for generations while the things we have now are meant to break easily so you have to buy again and again

    • @sanctuaryrain2010
      @sanctuaryrain2010 Месяц назад

      Yes, things were well made and meant to last a long time. No cheep lightweight plastic that falls apart or stops working within a few weeks or months. Her 1940's home is lovely.

  • @delsongalasinao706
    @delsongalasinao706 Месяц назад +1

    Being vintage tranfort you to a much simpler happier times.

  • @Safespace4all-13
    @Safespace4all-13 Месяц назад +2

    This is so me! I love how comforting it looks!

  • @demeurecorentin
    @demeurecorentin Год назад +86

    She should meet that other British guy living like it's the 1940s

    • @SuperHans64
      @SuperHans64 9 месяцев назад +5

      Jacob Rees Mogg?

    • @pam14321
      @pam14321 9 месяцев назад +5

      @@SuperHans64🤣🤣

    • @MargaretMcLaughlin-c7d
      @MargaretMcLaughlin-c7d 9 месяцев назад +2

      No - she's doing just fine, and anyway - why would she need a man to come along and ruin things, jackbooting around the place playing Lord and Master?

    • @kodokoa
      @kodokoa 9 месяцев назад +2

      yeah😂 someone like her grandpa

    • @mikethebloodthirsty
      @mikethebloodthirsty 9 месяцев назад +2

      ​B​@@SuperHans64 dunno about the 1940s, Jacob Reese Mogg is living in the 1840s... He'll be trying to bring back workhouses next.

  • @josephhapp9
    @josephhapp9 9 месяцев назад +1

    A windup gramophone would set the mood perfectly.
    Hope you find one soon.
    An electrical engineer/naturopath friend had his grand parents windup gramophone and gave me a demonstration,,,,amazed at the sound quality.
    Definitely an art in maintaining this style and era.
    You have done well.
    Love everything.

  • @asola4567
    @asola4567 3 месяца назад +2

    I Absolutely LOVE your Beautiful Home! Great job!😍🩷🌟👍🏻

  • @StephenJohnson-hl4kz
    @StephenJohnson-hl4kz 5 месяцев назад +2

    I love what you've done with your home. Love to live in a house like this all the time.

  • @hmmmmm2634
    @hmmmmm2634 3 месяца назад +2

    This is my idea of home. Absolutely love the 1930’s / 1940s style and this is just perfection ❤

  • @MG-dd9kj
    @MG-dd9kj 9 месяцев назад +1

    So endearing - thank you for allowing me a glimpse into you most private space - best regards from Germany

  • @michellegordon456
    @michellegordon456 Месяц назад +1

    Fabulous thank you😊

  • @louisel.sinniger2057
    @louisel.sinniger2057 9 месяцев назад +6

    Love your place. I was a child of the 50’s and my relatives homes were even older styled right down to the specific “smell”. My uncle’s wife had a ringer washer in one area of the kitchen with the rollers at the upper part to ring out the clothes before hanging them out in the yard. Your place looks so nice and homey. I loved the movie The Blond Bombshells with A great cast including Judy Dench. That time period I found so unique. Thanks

  • @christinepage181
    @christinepage181 4 месяца назад +2

    It's lovely, it's the sort of house that makes one feel safe, warm and secure. It takes me back to the house I was born in, in 1949.

  • @squiresquiffy3728
    @squiresquiffy3728 9 месяцев назад +4

    You and your home are charming. You have that rare thing these days:style and elegance.

  • @c.r4038
    @c.r4038 11 месяцев назад +3

    I would absolutely LOVE to visit this home! The 1940s is my favorite decade.

  • @thurayya8905
    @thurayya8905 9 месяцев назад +1

    I am so happy to see this house! It is beautiful and so is the time it is built around. It takes a special person to be able to "live" in another time and appreciate it.

  • @Button24
    @Button24 8 месяцев назад +1

    Wow this is absolutely stunning I love your home x

  • @karateana7593
    @karateana7593 Год назад +16

    Awesome house, I love that era too.

  • @jsa-z1722
    @jsa-z1722 9 месяцев назад +7

    Hannah Hall you are WONDERFUL!

  • @theofarmmanager267
    @theofarmmanager267 9 месяцев назад +2

    Good for her. Happiness is so hard to find and this lady has found it her way.

  • @StrangeFacinations
    @StrangeFacinations Год назад +26

    I love the whole look.

  • @rockradstone
    @rockradstone Год назад +3

    Excellent! I have similar taste.
    "I enjoy getting logs from the log store." 😅
    We don't do it that way in Oregon.

  • @juliemcleod9869
    @juliemcleod9869 9 месяцев назад +4

    I love the cafe in the Dorman Museum in Middlesbrough. It's all 1940's. Nice cups and saucers to drink from and a bell when you open the door. Love this vintage look.

  • @andrew-xr1de
    @andrew-xr1de 9 месяцев назад +4

    Beautiful house from a bygone era. JUST BRIALLIANT. Keep up the good work.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @PhillyPD3557
    @PhillyPD3557 18 дней назад

    Omg I love her! I started following her when she rescued an injured pigeon named Penny! Penny has passed but she’s continued helping out pigeons! So sweet to see her here also ❤

  • @lizzapaolia959
    @lizzapaolia959 3 месяца назад +2

    Thanks so much for sharing your video 🙏

  • @aozora21
    @aozora21 8 месяцев назад +2

    Her house is so cute! And she is really comforting

  • @rkl3692
    @rkl3692 9 месяцев назад +2

    I hope people follow your lead. Thank you for the inspiration ❤.

  • @georgevavoulis4758
    @georgevavoulis4758 7 месяцев назад +1

    So nice to see people enjoy and appreciate the past .

  • @sargee97
    @sargee97 Год назад +34

    Stunning house, how I wish I could visit I would feel like I was in heaven. I love vintage items x

  • @frankieb43
    @frankieb43 8 месяцев назад +2

    A lovely girl and I appreciate her style and the home decor. She's doing her and she's sharing social history xx

  • @pamelahelengunchick654
    @pamelahelengunchick654 9 месяцев назад +5

    may she likes that era....shes not hurting anyone.... let her be

  • @linpollitt8950
    @linpollitt8950 9 месяцев назад +2

    My last home was like this, full of furniture and ornaments from the 1930s and 40s. I still have 2 wardrobes full of original 1940s clothes. When I moved into my Edwardian house 2 years ago I felt I needed a change so I've gone more Arts and Crafts and William Morris. I still love the 1940s though and I often wear my vintage clothes. She seems to be a lovely girl ❤

  • @anamariagutierrez2019
    @anamariagutierrez2019 9 месяцев назад +4

    Your house looks lovely Congratulations

  • @caronstout354
    @caronstout354 9 месяцев назад +2

    Collectors like these are a Godsend to movie and television set decorators.

  • @buzzsaw161
    @buzzsaw161 Год назад +17

    Love the hair

  • @cynthiawilliams737
    @cynthiawilliams737 8 месяцев назад +1

    Such a comfort to see this home!

  • @johnleca
    @johnleca 6 месяцев назад +2

    You look like a proper lady and I enjoyed your video, best wishes.

  • @lazyorangehousecat9164
    @lazyorangehousecat9164 9 месяцев назад +3

    This is the way I would like to go. Bravo for getting there!

  • @jeanpatterson4283
    @jeanpatterson4283 Год назад +8

    This is just up my alley. I live this. Wish i could live in her house.

  • @isabelleguenette809
    @isabelleguenette809 8 месяцев назад +2

    Love this ! 1947 would be my back in time personal choice ...is it me !? But , at the moment she said this house was built in 1920 , I could feel that "The house" is a very happy and lucky house ...lol

  • @sonamwillow8999
    @sonamwillow8999 28 дней назад +2

    Love this ladys 1940 lifestyle

  • @6lr6ak6
    @6lr6ak6 3 месяца назад +2

    She's done a great job to her house,

  • @garywade1938
    @garywade1938 Месяц назад +2

    Love it , and I get the film thing to , well done you .

  • @shirleyradebach4443
    @shirleyradebach4443 2 месяца назад +2

    LOVE everything about this. 🥰❤

  • @bayoutown1990
    @bayoutown1990 5 месяцев назад +3

    We are making our house to look like a1940s farm house. Love it! Love it!

  • @es1442
    @es1442 8 месяцев назад +1

    I love it! Her & her home are adorable

  • @dancingtrout6719
    @dancingtrout6719 Месяц назад +1

    gramo phone has the older records but there are two kinds of records that are the old style ,one is for wind up & the other is for electric people make the mistake confusing the old records using the wrong type

  • @cessnaverdi
    @cessnaverdi 16 дней назад

    When my grandmother who lived out in California passed in the 1970s, we went out to settle her estate. Her house, which we had never been in, was stuck in the 1940s. We sold the house but brought a ton of her antiques back to Florida. I fell in love with those items as they graced our home as I grew up, and I still have many of her knickknacks and jewelry to this day. I love the 1940s.

  • @sheila1013
    @sheila1013 9 месяцев назад +5

    I can relate to this. I grew up in the 60's and my parents had me late in life. Many homes up and down the country were like this, ours included. I remember it being more about there being food on the table and keeping warm in the winter. In today's world, many people are constantly focussed on renovating/upgrading properties. In those days, the occasional swapping of a cushion cover or such like, did the trick. Lovely home by the way. 🤗

  • @paulmaryon9088
    @paulmaryon9088 9 месяцев назад +1

    Wonderful, thank you

  • @gboo7563
    @gboo7563 Год назад +5

    I love the look it’s fabulous I wish I could do ur hair too match I do authentic hairstyles for my reenactment group ugh ❤❤ keep it up though

  • @krystallovesclassics508
    @krystallovesclassics508 6 месяцев назад +2

    This makes me so happy.

  • @deborahsharpe8180
    @deborahsharpe8180 9 месяцев назад +1

    Love it. Loved the era. Beautiful home ❤

  • @marymcmahon2983
    @marymcmahon2983 4 месяца назад +2

    Soooooo inspiring

  • @yamidelacroix6729
    @yamidelacroix6729 Год назад +10

    I love it tbh. I've always wanted to have a home like this but most of my family like that weird monochrome look. I always thought this had more personality.

  • @justethical280
    @justethical280 4 месяца назад +2

    I like this also. I can relate to her.I'm a 40's fan.

  • @hereiswisdom
    @hereiswisdom 8 месяцев назад +1

    I love it. I widh they eould hsve shown more of her actual home. I love vintage aesthetics from the 40/50s.

  • @adrianamaclennan7832
    @adrianamaclennan7832 Год назад +4

    I love this. Does this beautiful lady have her own RUclips??

  • @penelopesadlo8348
    @penelopesadlo8348 11 месяцев назад +3

    Love the feel and ambiance. Pure quality and a genuine feel of your home being a sanctuary. A time when good manners and respect were normal. My grandparents had just such a home. One did not have a lot, but you felt safe❤

  • @judithrichards6085
    @judithrichards6085 11 месяцев назад +3

    When we were newly married and broke in 1971, we had to make do and mend. It was the happiest time of our marriage.🇬🇧🇬🇧

    • @hectormanuel9793
      @hectormanuel9793 11 месяцев назад

      Growing up, we were a poor family but did so much with what we had and were very happy. Now, all of us kids are doing well, but we all agree that back then was the happiest time of our lives!

    • @judithrichards6085
      @judithrichards6085 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@hectormanuel9793 Absolutely! I look back on those days with great happiness. 🎊

  • @candacehoover7753
    @candacehoover7753 9 месяцев назад +1

    I absolutely love your home ❤

  • @mrsgingernoisette
    @mrsgingernoisette 7 месяцев назад +1

    She is perfection in human form

  • @NobodySpecial509
    @NobodySpecial509 9 месяцев назад +1

    I love it SO much! ❤ It’s fabulous & so is she!