What is something in your house (a piece of furniture, a tool or houseware) that is more than 20 years old?
What is something in your house (a piece of furniture, a tool or houseware) that is more than 20 years old?
What is something in your house (a piece of furniture, a tool or houseware) that is more than 20 years old?
I have a Lower Paleolithic Acheulean bi-face hand axe likely made by Homo erectus. My father-in-law brought it back from Libya when he was working in oil fields in the late 1970s or early 1980s. I had it assessed by a lithic-specialist archeologist from the Witte Museum in San Antonio, Dr. Harry Shafer, who wrote a nice little report on the piece.
I am a tool who is more than 20 years old
Most of it lol! My microwave was built in sept 1983, I have a scythe and a machete both from the 1920's, my amp was bought new in 1998, the speakers are even older.
The vast amount of furnishings are older as well, aside from my tv (3yrs), the freezer (3 yrs), and my fridge (4yrs). Washer is I think around 10, the dryer may be 20ish.
your microwave reminds me of my nana’s that would pump out warm air when it was on. right at my face height when i was a child. 😂
It does actually. There's two warm air exhaust vents on top of the microwave that pushes air towards you. (Well the right hand one is an intake vent, the left is the actual exhaust.)
Yep, definitely feels like it at times, and the things that end up needing to be replaced are the newer ones.
My Xbox 360 is 1 month away from being 20 years old.
My PS2 is over 25 years old... Wow. My DDR pads for if still work!
I got a lot of Craigslist tools that are from the 80s and 90s.
I have a desk from circa 1995 that I rescued from a hoarder relative. (They wanted it gone, I obliged.)
I have an old oak dining set that looks to be about 30 years old. Another secondhand find.
I know I have a few books that meet those criteria. I got rid of the ones I wouldn't use, but I have a few older cookbooks I love.
I have a few older physical DVDs and video games. I still occasionally watch the DVDs, the video games I emulate but I'm not ready to let go of the physical copies.
I have a small box of sentimental items that are older. Stuff like jewelry or old letters.
Other than that, most of my possessions are newer. A lot of my older stuff got lost due to having to leave bad situations and leaving behind who knows how much stuff.
my house was made in 1870. I regularly buy and restore hand woodworking tools about that old too.
how what’s NOT old but is annoying is the varmints in my wall trying to get warm for the winter.. sigh.
My house is that old too! A beautiful old tenement with working fireplaces and cornicing. Love it
speaking as a firefighter: technically every room has at least one single use fireplace in it. (your house sounds great! 💚)
I glanced up from desk and the first thing I saw was a leather postcard that somebody sent to my great-grandmother back when she was "Miss." The postmark and date are worn away, but the art is copyright 1906. It's such a weird little artifact... someone clearly just cut out a mini-postcard from a hunk of leather by hand, and then printed an owl and a moon on it, and then "GET WISE Come to" and then someone scratched in pen where they were supposed to come to, but that's worn away. And on the back is space for filling in a name and address (which it kind of looks like was done with a burning tool, that part still readable, a little unsteady but mostly in this big-style ornate cursive like the Constitution), and not space for anything else. There's no message. Just "Come To (scratches)."
I have no idea why they made a leather postcard, but if they were looking to make a little novelty item that people would consider as special they succeeded, because for whatever reason I still have it well over a hundred years later.
The fridge in my apartment of 32 years old.
Old stuff is cool and all, but old fridges are generally terrible. It's one of the few cases where it's both more ecological and economical to just buy a simple* modern one. They pay for themselves within a year of electricity bills.
no smart home garbage, no touchscreens, and so on (and stay away from Samsung)
I have a small 'dorm' refridgerator in my office that was old when I bought it in 1991. Still works just fine.
That's impressive!
My Trek bicycle is that old now. It's a hybrid bike and I just maintain it every couple of years and it jjust keeps going. I ride the hell out of it, it's a tank (so heavy) but I love it.
I have several cameras that are 50-70 years old that I still use regularly.
Where do you get your film? And it developed? 35mm specifically.
If I'm just taking random pictures or testing a camera I use the cheap Fugifilm from Walmart. It's a 3 pack of 36 exposures for 25 bucks. For higher quality film I get it from reformedfilmlab.com. They have an excellent selection.
As for developing, I've only tried https://filmdeveloping.co/ and I've been happy with them so far.
My treadle sewing machine is roughly 100 years old. My cast iron pans are at least that old as well.
But srsly, I still have things in my closet that are 20+ years old.
My treadle sewing machine is roughly 100 years old
My sister has one of those, it still worked fine (although she preferred the electric one just because it was more convenient.) Those things are just immortal. It is a damn shame to see what the world could be without planned obsolescence making everything into Ikea.
I have a Popular Mechanics socket wrench set and screwdrivers that my grandmother gave me for Christmas 35 years ago. I have used them both in the last week.
My great grandfather’s bed, dresser, and chest of drawers is around 100 years old. When he passed way, my mom had it refinished, and I slept in it at home during high school. After I got married, I took to my home, and I’ve had it ever since.
I have a number of tools and pieces of furniture that I inherited from my grandfather. Most of 50 - 70 years old.
The best one is one he made from the leaf spring off a car he rebuilt for my mom in the 60s. He cut and ground the end and made the best pry bar ever. I've had family come to borrow it for home renovations. It wiggles into even tight gaps, does less damage than it seems like it should, and the slight springiness really helps you get those really stubborn nails to gradually pull free.
My Fan, it's the oldest thing I own. It's a little older than my mother.
My grandma gave it to me when she bought a new one.
My family has bought countless new fans over the years because they break, but this one of mine keeps working like the day I got it, and that's in a hot climate, I use it 10h a day for a big portion of the year
My radio from 1972, an RGD Olympic. When I was at university I lived in student halls and would often walk past this charity shop. It seemed to be open about one afternoon a week so stuff would sit in the window for quite a while.
I paid £6 and didn't use it all that much but these days I use it most days. It's bizarrely loud and has a huge power button, making it very satisfying to turn on.
My Yamaha AN1x and Novation Supernova synths. The pans in my kitchen were bought dirt cheap after I left university, and they are still going strong. Plenty of books and records. I have a box of old computer bits - SCSI adapters and such like. I have no idea why I still have that. A broken Eko 3/4 size guitar that I'd love to get fixed.
I have several calculators and electronic organizers that are old enough to drink in the US. A few slide rules that are old enough to retire. I might have some weird stuff in the back of the freezer that would qualify, too.
A vast mjority of our objects are 20+ years. I can think of:
I have optical disks from before 2005 that may work. bunch of toys. comics. im sure many tools in my toolbox. my bike is older. backpack and maybe some other bags. most of my clothes I bet. some furniture. some kitchenware. towels and bedding. man there is a lot.
Our dining room table, sideboards, etc. were brought from England to Canada by an ancestor in about 1850.
Most of the things in my house are more than 20 years old.
I have books from 19th century.
A ton of things; from my Driza-Bone wax coats to my Game Boy. I've got plenty of old tshirts, posters, electronics and vinyl records.
Happens when you get addicted to collecting different stuff every 2 weeks. Old stuff is pretty cool, though.
The writing desk, the Macintosh-style chair that my brother made, this bed. The bookshelves (that I made) are probably around that old now (virtually all the books on them are older than that too, as are some of the clothes in the wardrobe). King Ludd - my old desktop that I haven't switched on at all in the last 4 years but still don't want to get rid of - is about that old too. It is basically a piece of furniture now. When it comes to it the aspidistra that is stood on it is more than twice that age - probably about three times in fact.
That coil-lead, clip-on, bright red lamp in the corner is more than twice that too. I bought it (and another) for a bedside 'table' project involving an oil drum in the late '80s. I never finished the project. I could carry on with stuff outside this room, but...
The majority of my vinyl collection is more than 20 years old which are predominantly the reggae, funk and soul sections as well as a bunch of misfit classics from 60s-90s. My primary record player is also from the 80s but the rest of the system is pretty modern.
I've got a copy of the Fannie Farmer cookbook that predates WW2
My pocketknife is 24 years old. Somehow still in decent shape.
I think the majority of my stuff is over 20 years old.
I could damn near write a book! I collect old electronic test equipment & computers, as well as old processors/chips. So quite a bit of that. Tools-wise I have quite a few, my favorite few being my great great grandfather’s tap & die set (early 1900s), my 1985 Bridgeport R2E4 C/NC milling machine that I’m restoring, and my 1954 Sheldon lathe!
I’ve got a manual coffee grinder that’s turning a hundred in a couple years.
I’ve also got a WWI German infantry saber that’s almost 130 years old.
I have a bunch of hand tools well over 20 years old. Some cast iron cookware, stainless steel eating utensils, pyre dishes, corningware, and other eating stuff that doesn't have non-stick coatin last forever too. Would have dishes that old if we didn't switch out a couple years ago.
I have a full stereo setup with four large speakers and a subwoofer that I purchased in the 90s. They did sit idle for a decade but I have been using them in my shop for a few years now. Also have an stereo amplifier from the early 80s I inherited, but it isn't currently hooked up.
Also have one CD and one DVD player on hand in case they are needed. Blue rays are 20 years old yet are they?
I hav clothes, mostly band shirts and jeans I don't fit into, that are over 20 years old as I don't wear them often.
My primary winter coat is from the 90s. Only need to wear it a couple.mknths of the year anymore, but Columbia made some tough stuff at that time.
I'd estimate that about 3/4 of the furniture in my home is hand me downs or family pieces. Plus all the stuff I'm holding onto from my teenage years and earlier (books, mugs, hats, game systems and games).
There's a decent age gap between my wife and her older siblings. They're established with kids just finishing college, and we had just built our first (and so far only) house, so when her parents passed most of their furniture went to us.
I have a cupboard and desk from 1776. They're a pain to move because ceilings are too low nowadays.
Although the oldest thing is an ammonite fossil I found.