Rare typewriter from the 1950s, used for writing sheet music.
My grandfather gave me this Tube Radio as a gift from the 40s/50s and it still has an amazing sound.
Console TV from the ’70s, my entertainment when I was a child.
My Transonic T 16e9 from the late 80's. Fell on hard times and this baby always makes wherever I go feel like home.
100-year-old waffle iron that I still use.
Pocket watch from the Ottoman Empire, 140 years old and it still works.
My father’s Talkboy from the 1990s that still works perfectly.
Vintage Icebox fridge from the 19th century.
A working hole punch that is 100+ years old.
100-year-old pencil sharpener.
My Kitchen Aid mixer from the 1960s is in perfect condition and I have been using it for 8 years now.
Meat grinder from the 1920s.
My 75-year-old grinder — I am never going to use another one.
Working from home is a little tricky for a Lab Technician, so maintenance work it is. This little beauty is knocking on 25 years. It's a 12 Volts DC/AC Unilab Power Unit. Used when I was at school 10 years ago, and by another teacher over 20 years ago. A quick service and is ready to be used again.
This honing steel has been in my a family for four generations.
1971 Nikon F Photomic.
A vintage piggy bank slot machine from Las Vegas.
My 40-year-old Tonka Crane — now I’ve given it to my son.
My friend, my sewing machine from the 1950s.
My grandfather gave me a CB Radio from the ’70s and it still works.
00+ year-old iron in perfect condition, no electricity, no problem.
Peugeot coffee grinder, 117+ years old, and yes, it is from the carmaker.
60 year old Barber's chairs. My father and I have been putting them to good use for the past decade. They still have ashtrays, and they feel like rotating a tank turret when you spin them.
My grandfather’s Sears Roebuck belt sander from the 50s/60s — it’s still in a perfect condition.
A Swiss music box from the 1940s — it works beautifully.
A gift from my great-grandmother, a vintage Mickey Mouse pocket watch in great condition.