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Thread: Best city for vintage living

  1. #31
    Call Me a Cab Flat Foot Floey's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Martti Kujansuu View Post
    Surprisingly I would rate the third largest city in Finland, Tampere, over the capital of Finland, Helsinki, in terms of vintage architecture and community. Tampere was recently also voted for the best city in Finland.
    Was there last year and yes. It's great. Lot of cheap vintage in the charity/thrift stores. Unless Sproily or you already found and bought it. Haha.
    Most important: the people are super nice. The language is not easy but they all speak english fluently.

    Negative: uhm...beer is too expensive.

  2. #32
    One Too Many Miss Sis's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by V.C. Brunswick View Post
    Hertfordshire
    I'm still stoked reading about the Vintage New Year's event that was at the English manor house. Can't remember which thread it was on. Now that must be quite a thrill to be surrounded by history that's older than anything in the US.
    Ah, but the people there were from all over England AND Europe! It's more about the group of people than the location, as we tend to have things going on in various places. We have, for example, a number of friends from Switzerland who organise things there too.

    Bath is a beautiful city, but there is hardly a 'vintage' scene. A friend of mine lives just South of there and has to come East to London for things. I live an hour out of London and it really is true that when you are tired of London, you are tired of life! Always something going on, lots of vintage shops, etc, easy to get elsewhere. Downside is property prices are mental.

    S'difficult to have everything in life, I suppose.
    There is no time, Madam, at which hats do not matter.

  3. #33
    One of the Regulars
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    I have a radical suggestion: Here.

    Oak Ridge, Tennessee.

    The vast majority of the homes here in town date back to the Clinton Engineer Works, the streets still lay as the Corps of Engineers laid them out in 1942, and Grove Center, Jefferson Center and Jackson Square are still shopping areas. People here at TFL talk history, I drive right by it every day. The famous picture of the end of the war in Oak Ridge was taken 2 blocks from here, the Guest House where just about anybody that had to do with the Project that was here temporarily stayed is another block down and the house I am in right now was built in early 1943. Just over the Ridge are Oliver Springs and Petros (where they filmed October Sky, a lot of the storefronts are *exactly* as they re-did them for the film) and Knoxville's a 30 minute drive. Remember the "Ennessee Theater" in the movie? The Tennessee Theater on Gay Street in Knoxville has been restored to its 1930s glory, and the Bijou is a block or so down. 30 minutes or so the other way is the Big South Fork and the Great Smoky Mountains National Park is an easy day trip. If you ride motorcycles, the single most challenging road on Earth is about as far as the Smokies. US129 between TN and NC, the Dragon, has 318 curves in 11 miles. Like the old slogan said,

    Come to Tennessee. We're playing your song.
    Member, Open Road Guild

  4. #34
    Call Me a Cab 1961MJS's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Flat Foot Floey View Post
    Was there last year and yes. It's great. Lot of cheap vintage in the charity/thrift stores. Unless Sproily or you already found and bought it. Haha.
    Most important: the people are super nice. The language is not easy but they all speak english fluently.

    Negative: uhm...beer is too expensive.
    Good God man, something must be done, I thought that Beer is one of the food groups back in the Fatherland (Great-Grandmother Mueller nee' Brokamp, Great-Grandfather Berund Mueller, and Great-Great-Grandfather Schroeder).

    The four food groups ARE Beer, Sausage, Dark Bread, and Strudel aren't they?

    Later
    Mike
    Groucho Marx said it best:
    “Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it everywhere, diagnosing it incorrectly and applying all the wrong remedies.”

  5. #35
    Call Me a Cab A.C. Lyles's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by dhermann1 View Post
    They used Molwaukee to portray Chicago in Kevin Costner's Untouchables
    Not according to IMDb

    http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0094226/locations
    Stripped of the cunning artifices of the tailor, and standing forth in the garb of Eden - what a sorry set of round-shouldered, spindle-shanked, crane-necked varlets would civilized men appear. ~ Herman Melville

  6. #36
    One Too Many TomS's Avatar
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    Hartford, CT. There are MANY restored early 20th century neighborhoods, apartment complexes, etc to live in. The city has nice a nice social scene, and Bushnell park has a 19th century carosell to ride.

  7. #37
    I'll Lock Up Widebrim's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by plain old dave View Post
    I have a radical suggestion: Here.

    Oak Ridge, Tennessee.

    The vast majority of the homes here in town date back to the Clinton Engineer Works, the streets still lay as the Corps of Engineers laid them out in 1942, and Grove Center, Jefferson Center and Jackson Square are still shopping areas. People here at TFL talk history, I drive right by it every day. The famous picture of the end of the war in Oak Ridge was taken 2 blocks from here, the Guest House where just about anybody that had to do with the Project that was here temporarily stayed is another block down and the house I am in right now was built in early 1943. Just over the Ridge are Oliver Springs and Petros (where they filmed October Sky, a lot of the storefronts are *exactly* as they re-did them for the film) and Knoxville's a 30 minute drive. Remember the "Ennessee Theater" in the movie? The Tennessee Theater on Gay Street in Knoxville has been restored to its 1930s glory, and the Bijou is a block or so down. 30 minutes or so the other way is the Big South Fork and the Great Smoky Mountains National Park is an easy day trip. If you ride motorcycles, the single most challenging road on Earth is about as far as the Smokies. US129 between TN and NC, the Dragon, has 318 curves in 11 miles. Like the old slogan said,

    Come to Tennessee. We're playing your song.
    You make a good case, Dave...
    1. John 3:16, 17
    2. Dress to please yourself, but do take others into some consideration.

    -Lee

  8. #38
    One of the Regulars Hercule's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by TomS View Post
    Hartford, CT. There are MANY restored early 20th century neighborhoods, apartment complexes, etc to live in. The city has nice a nice social scene, and Bushnell park has a 19th century carosell to ride.
    That's nice to hear. I grew up in (what WAS then) a rural community just a bit north and east of the river, and for us Hartford a place we never went and was to be avoided at all costs, because it was perceived as a city largely rife with crime and squaler. This was during the late 60s and early 70s. When I later went back in the early 90s to do a degree at the U. of Hartford, I found the city very approachable yet still of limited appeal socially. Glad to see it may be on the up swing.

  9. #39
    Practically Family Benzadmiral's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Captain_joe6 View Post
    Portland, Oregon. Strange and thriving vintage scene, and you're pretty much promised acceptance, approving looks, and the odd compliment from a stranger no matter what you wear. We're big on craftsman homes and so long as you settle in a suburb, the schools aren't bad either. Nice place to be, so long as 8 months of rain (read: fall, winter, and spring) don't make you want to kill yourself.
    I'd be there, or Milwaukee, in a half second if I could land a job. Believe me, if you want to dress like a grownup, you need a cooler climate than the Deep South. Eight months of hot nasty summer, sometimes nine or ten, is just as bad as eight of rain.
    Paul W. (the Benzadmiral)
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  10. #40
    I'll Lock Up AtomicEraTom's Avatar
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    I've been considering the Milwaukee area, trying to find a better job. The prospects are much better there than as far north in Wisconsin as I am. The relocation will be tough, though. At least there's plenty of homes, whether you like Victorian, Craftsman, Mid-Century, or whatever, to choose from.

    Quote Originally Posted by Benzadmiral View Post
    I'd be there, or Milwaukee, in a half second if I could land a job. Believe me, if you want to dress like a grownup, you need a cooler climate than the Deep South. Eight months of hot nasty summer, sometimes nine or ten, is just as bad as eight of rain.
    -Tom N.

    I tell it like it used to be.
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