Abandoned 1970s Time Capsule Home They Passed Away And Left Everything Behind | 4K

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RealmXplore

RealmXplore

Жыл бұрын

Today i explore a abandoned time capsule home with a 70's-80's theme. They passed away and left everything behind. 4K
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@RealmXplore
@RealmXplore Жыл бұрын
Thank you for watching if you took the time from your day. Really hope you enjoyed todays video. Let me know in the comments below your thoughts on this home. Please do not forget to hit that like button for me really helps a small channel grow. Do not forget to check me out on INSTAGRAM @RealmXplore Have a GREAT and SAFE weekend y'all much love.
@ricknick5318
@ricknick5318 7 ай бұрын
That thing on top of the cabinet I think is for editing videos. Like old school 8 mm
@Jjangbunbun
@Jjangbunbun 7 ай бұрын
I love how you’re not obnoxious and dumb in your commentary like a lot of other bigger explorers..
@requiemcollectiblesgaming
@requiemcollectiblesgaming 7 ай бұрын
That device is to edit film for motion pictures.
@johnjeffreys6440
@johnjeffreys6440 7 ай бұрын
i like how nothing is ransacked.
@CoopyKat
@CoopyKat 7 ай бұрын
@RealmXplore This is my first time on your channel. How did you get access to this abandoned house? I am a veteran and trying to see if there are programs or even individuals that can donate some of these old abandoned houses to veterans like myself. One thing about the video is it's a little sad, you can see people had a full life in that house...now they're gone...I would hate to see abandoned homes like these be snatched up by banks just to make $$$.
@nanabanana1983
@nanabanana1983 7 ай бұрын
They weren’t hoarders, that’s all from the aftermath. You can tell she kept a nice home back in the day
@babu357
@babu357 7 ай бұрын
I was thinking that too. It doesn't make sense to have half empty cabinets if they were hoarders either.
@daisyglaze1817
@daisyglaze1817 7 ай бұрын
They did hang onto/ have a lot of stuff. Although I do think they probably kept a much tidier home than how it appears now. I don't know, is one still considered a hoarder if they have tons of stuff but keep it orderly and clean? Or do you have to have your place a mess as well to be considered a hoarder?
@0verload
@0verload 7 ай бұрын
@@Eyesorecrymore I agree, but the majority of things like furniture and the decor was 70's and early 80's. Seems to me like they were almost living in the past and were just content/didn't want change unless they absolutely had to. Definitely reminded me of my grandparents home many years back in the 80's and early 90's.
@Sky-cz9lj
@Sky-cz9lj 7 ай бұрын
I absolutely agree with you nanabanana. I really wish these people who film these would get a background on the people that lived there. It's so sad to me that the place was just abandoned by the owners family. There just has to be a reason in my mind anyway.
@mindyschocolate
@mindyschocolate 6 ай бұрын
Idk, those bedrooms look overfilled. You could empty my dresser and closet and my mountains of stuff wouldn’t even come close to the height of those piles in the bedrooms in this video. Definitely collected too much stuff.
@bethanywhite877
@bethanywhite877 7 ай бұрын
As a realtor , I’ve seen some homes like this. They haven’t gone unclaimed but it was shocking how the families let so many meaningful things go with the estate.
@babu357
@babu357 7 ай бұрын
There are a lot of untold stories that go along with each family. If you knew them it might not be so shocking.
@rehull1973
@rehull1973 7 ай бұрын
Most of the people with a close connection and that would normally care realize that the stuff is meaningless. They are approaching old age as well and realize none of that material crap means anything to anyone. It all just junk, even the photos. The people in them will all be dead, dying or have no real connection to the older people in them.
@byronbenguche
@byronbenguche 7 ай бұрын
My ex girlfriend is a realtor when i would visit her we would go see some of the houses she was selling one house she was about to sell the house look like it was trapped in the 70's everything was in tact including the kitchen and they two cars in the garage the owner died two years prior his kids didn't want the house so it stood boarded up and abandoned what was crazy normally the roof and everything would be messed up but nope everything was good condition and in tact
@EllaNonimato
@EllaNonimato 7 ай бұрын
@@byronbenguche can you say if they look like in this video? I thought a house from the 70s that was left alone would have all the things rotten, i mean, it is not a time capsule...
@kerosene4751
@kerosene4751 7 ай бұрын
@@rehull1973 Yes but you're here looking at this video and commenting, it shows even a total stranger will take some interest in the "meaningless junk" left behind by others. I was pausing video a lot to get a look at different objects. Yes most of it is junk, but I think a shoe box size of interesting meaningful things could be obtained from this house... that old framed photo from 1939 with all the people - someone in that photo has a connection to this house. It's not meaningless, it's "people in our community", the mysterious lives of neighbors! The old films would be interesting to see, because no other copy would exist other than the single instance found in this house.
@MarkMeadows90
@MarkMeadows90 7 ай бұрын
That is indeed a time capsule right there. Reminds me of my grandparent's house right before my grandfather passed away back in 2013. He was moved to a senior care facility due to his degrading dementia. My grandmother passed away in 2007, so it was tough for him living by himself, especially with his dementia getting the best of him. When he was moved out, he left quite a bit behind at the old house that me and my parents had to go through and clean out. I miss my grandparents every single day.
@cobolsaurus
@cobolsaurus 7 ай бұрын
I know the feeling
@johnjeffreys6440
@johnjeffreys6440 7 ай бұрын
i like how nothing is vandalized.
@user-wp6zs2gk6l
@user-wp6zs2gk6l 7 ай бұрын
That house reminds me a lot of my great-grandparents on my Grandpa's side on my Mom's side. They lived near an Orange Grove in Central Florida. This was back in the early 1980s. I remember Mom would take me over there. And my Great-Grandmother always gave me milk and fig newton cookies. Also remember there were old toys that she would let me play with. A lot of the furniture and the TV, looks like the things they had. I am surprised that at least the family photos and albums were left unclaimed.
@debbieschmidling8158
@debbieschmidling8158 7 ай бұрын
So do I. ❤@@cobolsaurus
@wendylederer367
@wendylederer367 6 ай бұрын
I always thought that’s what families did when someone dies or moves away but so many people just don’t care about their memories. It’s a house! It has value, you’re suppose to take care of it!
@MugenGlider82
@MugenGlider82 7 ай бұрын
Judging by the amount of slides, film, and photos left about in the house, it leaves one to wonder, if she was trying to remember aspects of her life before the Alzheimer’s robbed her of her memories😢
@evanwilliams6406
@evanwilliams6406 7 ай бұрын
In a lot of ways yes. My mother had metastatic breast cancer and it spread to her brain and her memory was failing and she kept a lot of pictures close to her, and her own personal documents and she even had written down information like her divorces and where she had lived in her diaries. Writing in a journal kept her mind sharp and gave her one for Christmas every year up until she passed.
@back-engineered
@back-engineered 7 ай бұрын
The reason all these things are spread around the house is because many people have broken in and gone through everything. It's the trespassers that have laid all those photos around, not the previous residents.
@evanwilliams6406
@evanwilliams6406 7 ай бұрын
@@back-engineered Yes. I agree. They give explorers who want to just admire a bad rap.
@leeluvslife
@leeluvslife 6 ай бұрын
Explorers tend to dig that stuff out and stage it for photos and videos.
@jenewingtxlpc
@jenewingtxlpc 3 ай бұрын
That makes sense. I think that’s why there are also so many puzzles. It’s a great way to keep a person’s mind sharp as well. And I agree with those who say the person who lived here wasn’t a hoarder. You can see where the places for things were and what people pulled out of drawers and closets to make things a mess in there. It looks kept like a very 1950s American housewife. The aesthetic for that time was fairly minimalist and very tidy.
@antoineturner1606
@antoineturner1606 6 ай бұрын
I'm literally sitting here looking around wondering how it would be once I've passed on. REALLY sad to think one day all of my things I've cherished and valued while I was living may not be felt the same by the person who has to come and clear it out. It's just me, I never had children and me and my siblings were never as close as I wished/hoped we should've/could've been.
@davechristian7543
@davechristian7543 6 ай бұрын
thats why u want to change the way u think no n let go of everything apart from the things u use n need, i did about 8 years ago
@DaFreezeey
@DaFreezeey 6 ай бұрын
There' still time to have that relationship with your siblings that you want... Just reach out to them
@derealized797
@derealized797 6 ай бұрын
I've thought about this before, how everything we own that can't be sold off, all of our photos throughout our lives, none of it means anything once we're gone. Most of our things go in a dumpster, our homes are emptied and remodeled. Unless it's left abandoned. And if that happens, then most of the time kids go in and trash everything. Our friends and family may remember us, but for how long? as time goes on, the same thing goes for them as well. How much thought do we give to those before us? Until we think about it happening to us, we don't think about it at all. I realized years ago that it's not worth stressing out on the expectations placed on us, we should live in some ways more for ourselves, and measure our success on what matters to us, our experience and how we feel about it. I don't want to own a house, not in these times. I don't plan on having kids. I'm trying to simplify certain things, like houses need constant work, I'd rather have an RV or something. Less expenses, means more into savings, and more time traveling or doing things that interest me.
@mare8872
@mare8872 7 ай бұрын
I’m 54 and grew up in the 70’s. I saw the Jean Nate perfume. So nostalgic. My mother used it
@elizabethdavis1974
@elizabethdavis1974 7 ай бұрын
I noticed that and the air spun powder, I still use that today
@anonymous_protagonist
@anonymous_protagonist 7 ай бұрын
Ditto! I'm 58 and that place was like a weird nostalgia trip the whole way through.
@karin3507
@karin3507 Ай бұрын
Loved Jean Nate..spray and powder..Mom had Chantilly perfume body cream, bro loved his old spice soap on a rope, Dad his old spice aftershave..great times.
@zenabumblebee9738
@zenabumblebee9738 7 ай бұрын
Seeing the mini Dixie cup holder in the bathroom really hit me for some reason. I forgot all about them and they used to be so common.
@coolbluelights
@coolbluelights 7 ай бұрын
We still have one in my house. it's old af
@elizabethdavis1974
@elizabethdavis1974 7 ай бұрын
Same here, reminded me of childhood, I can smell those little cups. 😊❤
@alexac3098
@alexac3098 7 ай бұрын
I did a double take when he scanned right by that. We had them in our bathrooms in the 1970s as well. This house is surprisingly full of little treasures.
@WhatsCookingTime
@WhatsCookingTime 7 ай бұрын
Yeah my mom had them in both bathrooms growing up. Everyone did
@TheAtlanteanArchive
@TheAtlanteanArchive 2 ай бұрын
​@@elizabethdavis1974Absolutely. They had a particular feel and smell to them.
@Jjangbunbun
@Jjangbunbun 7 ай бұрын
7:44 the note on how to start the microwave. How precious and such a grandma thing 🥲
@butterfliesandfate
@butterfliesandfate 8 ай бұрын
I can't believe family members would not want the photo albums. Im hopelessly nostalgic and love going back in time when I was young and most of the people I loved were still alive. Love the video. Thanks.
@CharmSchool_Reject
@CharmSchool_Reject 7 ай бұрын
Pictures are fantastic unless they're of a bunch of people you don't know
@wizpin
@wizpin 7 ай бұрын
Maybe they are all dead, -or in jail-
@88corinutza
@88corinutza 7 ай бұрын
kids today only care about themselves and are greedy. Thank God 1 of my 3 calls me EVERYDAY. ill be leaving her everything 😍
@Chris-tq1jy
@Chris-tq1jy 7 ай бұрын
Our existence is completely wiped out in 3 generations. Unless you’re a historic figure, nobody knows who their great great grandparents are.
@asdf9890
@asdf9890 7 ай бұрын
@@88corinutza when have kid's not cared about only themselves, kids are selfish! That's nothing new. I'm in my 40's btw, before you label me Gen Z.
@TheBuckeyeJeff
@TheBuckeyeJeff 8 ай бұрын
I was born in 1970. This could have been anyone's house in my family when I was a kid. The colors!
@user-wp6zs2gk6l
@user-wp6zs2gk6l 7 ай бұрын
I was born in 1977. I lived almost my whole life in Tennessee. But the first few years of my life, I lived in Central Florida. My Great-Grandparents lived in a small house right near an Orange Grove in Central Florida. A lot of what was in this abandoned home reminded me of their old house. Especially the old furniture and the TV set in the living room. I remember my Great-Grandma would always give me milk and Fig Newtons and let me play with old toys that were still around. This was back in the early 1980s. My Great-Grandparents have been gone for many years, but the memories still remain.
@anidnmeno
@anidnmeno 7 ай бұрын
I was born in 1988, likewise, could have been anyone's place i visited growing up, kinda remids me of my very own house before the remodel in '03... less garbage of course
@robwhitmore6262
@robwhitmore6262 7 ай бұрын
I was also born in 1970. Real nostalgia trip for me, except for all the hoarding. Love the 8-track/record player in almost pristine condition.
@tonib.3016
@tonib.3016 6 ай бұрын
​@@robwhitmore6262born in 70 here also! I am grateful I grew up in the 70s ❤
@vinaymulukutla358
@vinaymulukutla358 7 ай бұрын
There is a very eerie and deathlike calm to be felt here. To see that a family full of life and hopes/dreams were once there and now, just emptiness. It's like time just stopped still and they had gone. When we moved out of our house of 29 years last year, I'm thankful everyday that I wasn't there to see the moving process and to see the house and the life that we knew there, stripped away into bare emptiness. I can only remember it the way it was.
@birdysama2980
@birdysama2980 6 ай бұрын
My grandparents split up a while ago and sold the house in the late 2000's i live close enough to the old house that i sometimes drive by to see how it looks now, what changed, etc. its a torture. This house was my childhood so in my head i still see it exactly how it used to be, the wild xmas parties that we had in there, my grandmas rose garden and grandpas apple tree ... Im glad you never got to see your old home while it got emptied or after it got sold because it truly hurts
@BingBreep-mk6om
@BingBreep-mk6om 6 ай бұрын
To me it does not feel so empty. Yes the people who lived there are gone, physically, but much of their essence remains. And despite those people being complete strangers with no relation to me thay I know of, I am still curious about their lives, how they lived. I guess being born in the mid 1970s helps with this, because a lot of the stuff in that house was the kind of stuff I grew up with. That little TV with the books and records around it is much like the TV I watched evening airings Scooby Doo on in 1982.
@vinaymulukutla358
@vinaymulukutla358 6 ай бұрын
@@birdysama2980 According to my mother who helped the new owners with the purchase, the new owners have changed it so much that the house is unrecognisable and full of things that we couldn’t have ever imagined. The house as we knew it is gone forever. They even took down the front lawn to expand the car park. I am therefore afraid to go and see it but am tempted. My old neighbourhood is now a distant barren land that I no longer recognise. It’s as if I was never there. I went last Summer to see it and was shocked at how disconnected that place is to me in spite of living there 29 years. I asked God to give me a sign that I really lived there. I got my answer in ten seconds when my old neighbour and friend appeared right in front of me (she’s a girl around my age and was getting ready to take her kid for his activity class or something). We reconnected and had a huge catch up. That helped a bit to smoothen the shock. Thus I completely identify with your experience and thanks so much for sharing that.
@ClancyWoodard-yw6tg
@ClancyWoodard-yw6tg 6 ай бұрын
This place remind me of a house. I explored when I was a kid it had been abandoned since 1979
@LJC4495
@LJC4495 7 ай бұрын
I would restore everything in that house and live in my own personal time capsule ❤
@gypsy4136
@gypsy4136 Жыл бұрын
Definitely a woman's home. Looks like someone looked through her stuff already. I don't think she was a hoarder, just people going through her things. That upstairs furniture is amazing and that Chenille bedspread!!!! 😍
@RealmXplore
@RealmXplore Жыл бұрын
Agreed definitely a womans home. Thank you very much 😊
@amc5936
@amc5936 Жыл бұрын
@@RealmXplore why no back story makes the video way way more interesting
@RealmXplore
@RealmXplore Жыл бұрын
@A Mc Hello im not sure what you mean? Are you saying because there is no back story it makes it more interesting or why do i not have a back story and that would make the video more interesting lol? Thank you for your comment
@amc5936
@amc5936 Жыл бұрын
@@RealmXplore i clicked off the video because you gave no history and or back sotry as to whom lived there did they die or a possibilltiy of why it is no longer occupied, look at bros of decay videoes they do their best 98% of the time to tell you about the history of the place and who lived there
@RealmXplore
@RealmXplore Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your feedback. Some places i do have an actual history about which i do talk about. Simply in this case i do not know any history here thats why i ask you guys to help me with the clues to put things together as im seeing this home for the first time myself. I do not give out names or locations of places as well to protect them from vandals. I also do not want to just make up a bs story about the house or the family like a lot of channels do for clicks. if you did not click away i did discover some medical paper work which said they had lymphoma and another type of horrible cancer. I look for clues and piece things together and i always ask you guys to help me figure it out. I really appreciate you A Mc for being honest i value your opinion to help me improve. Thank for giving my channel a chance. I also do not have the budget of these bigger channels just a dude with a camera and a job bills and what not i do not make any money on youtube.
@susanclark8391
@susanclark8391 8 ай бұрын
The 8 mm film splicers (and there also seemed to be a projector on the table by the game), are to view and edit 8 mm home movies. My dad has a box of home movies of us from the 60s and 70s and I used to view them on the splicer a few years ago when he no longer had the projector. To view the movies on the projector, you put the film reel on one side and thread it through onto an empty reel on the other side and then you would run the projector and view the film that way projected onto a screen or a wall. Just like a movie theatre projector. My dad had a projector when I was a kid and we would watch the home movies projected onto a screen that he would set up in the living room. The screen was on a metal tripod and it would fold away. Family entertainment in the 70s! You've likely seen home movies from those old reels. They usually count down 4, 3, 2, 1. Those splicers and projectors are likely worth something today I would think. Thanks for the trip down memory lane!
@mimist2
@mimist2 7 ай бұрын
Preserving food in sealed jars is called "canning". The game board upstairs is a "carom" board. This is possibly the most undisturbed abandoned home I've ever seen! Gave me a very melancholy feeling mixed with nostalgia. So much is familiar but no longer part of the present time.
@basicfacekick
@basicfacekick 7 ай бұрын
These are the saddest urban exploration videos. It's bad enough seeing pieces of memories in a home that's decaying and has been looted or cleared out already. But the ones where so much is still present and intact... you see more of the lives of those people. Family photos, clothes they wore, music they listened to. Almost like they could come home at any moment and pop in a VHS or throw on a record, and they're not really gone. Very sad to see. In a way this video lets them live again, though.
@oaktree1628
@oaktree1628 6 ай бұрын
If you passed away from illness or old age with no one around to take care of your house or estate for you, would you want to “live again” this way on the internet for the world to see and comment on? I don’t think so. This is more like an invasion of privacy.
@Trendle222
@Trendle222 6 ай бұрын
@@oaktree1628 i dont think so, as long as they are respectful and appreciate your house and belongings
@EdsterIII
@EdsterIII 7 ай бұрын
Being a kid who grew up in the 70's this house has a lot of things I remember. The colors of the furniture wasn't always a good look. Yet ours anyway was very comfortable. I remember our pea green 🛋couch🛋 with floral designs on it. Ugh it was hideous, but again it was extremely comfortable to lay down on. I can't remember what the floor television set was called exactly, but we had a 25" or there abouts, but when we moved, it was a TANK to carry. The lamps and lampshades were not very eye popping either...lol. But it was all reliable, never broke down unless one of us knocked it over, or hit it with a ball or ???? I had the old Atari 2600 VCS, the Commodore Vic-20, the Commodore-64, and later an 🍎🍏Apple IIe🍏🍎. The later was more of a early 80's item. I have so many wonderful childhood memories of the 70's and 80's. I was born in 1967 so my childhood was spent in the 70's and my teenage years was spent in the 80's. Both were very special and I cherish them all. Anytime I can get a chance to step into a "time machine" or a time capsule I jump at the opportunity. I don't remember all of it and sometimes a video, a commercial, or ???? will trigger a moment I forgot about. Being able to remember those moments or memories is again something special! Thank you. God Bless and great job.
@danielcastillo1225
@danielcastillo1225 7 ай бұрын
I was also born in 1967, and I agree with everything you said, it truly is a time capsule. I saw all those items he was rummaging through and remembered how puzzles were a thing back in the day, AN people used to always keep brochures of vacation places. Great video, awesome find. I also like how he was respectful of all the stuff there and left it where he found it..
@eliotness100
@eliotness100 7 ай бұрын
What amazes me about this is that at one time a family lived there with their children imagine the happiness and laughter and all the energy that was there.
@spaceflight1019
@spaceflight1019 7 ай бұрын
Typically, the father worked at a local factory and put the kids through college. They graduated and moved away. Now that both parents are dead, the house and furnishings is a burden, and if the survivors don't agree on how to dispose of it the house and furnishings will be stolen, vandalized, and eventually burned down.
@CoryFortson-eg9jg
@CoryFortson-eg9jg 6 ай бұрын
Yea theres no way this house has sat empty for 50 yrs without heavy vandalism and or arson
@sapphirerain70
@sapphirerain70 7 ай бұрын
I was born in 1970 and this reminds me of my grandmas house. The doilies and even the projector. What a beautiful time to have memories of. Thank you for this walk through, I enjoyed it very much. You are very kind and respectful. God bless❤😊
@tonib.3016
@tonib.3016 6 ай бұрын
Born in 70 here as well!!! Omg this house was so 70s. With the wall panel and burnt orange and avocado green chairs and so much more.
@AbrasiousProductions
@AbrasiousProductions 7 ай бұрын
I wish I lived in a home like that, I've always admired 70s/80s homes, the atmosphere meshes with my personality so well❤
@tempest411
@tempest411 7 ай бұрын
Honestly, 80s homes aren't really that different from today. At least in California. 80s vintage homes are a bit better quality that what came later, starting in the 90s when that horrible OSB stuff started to replace genuine plywood in home construction.
@gamma21285
@gamma21285 6 ай бұрын
​@tempest411 That's true. Most houses built in the 80s seem more common with houses built today. You can pretty much tell right away a house that was built in the 70s or before.
@bejxhdjdushjwj
@bejxhdjdushjwj 6 ай бұрын
Meee toooooo😢😢😢 i always said i'm Born in the wrong era
@AbrasiousProductions
@AbrasiousProductions 6 ай бұрын
@@bejxhdjdushjwj me too brother
@bejxhdjdushjwj
@bejxhdjdushjwj 6 ай бұрын
@@AbrasiousProductions yeaaahh
@gypsy4136
@gypsy4136 Жыл бұрын
OH MY GOSH! Those brown dishes are antique and my favorite! It's called McCoy. What a goldmine! That place is amazing! It makes me sick to think all that beautiful stuff will most likely end up in a landfill. 😞 R.I.P person that owned this gorgeous home. Lots of love and stay safe ❤️
@RealmXplore
@RealmXplore Жыл бұрын
There was tons of nice stuff in this house for sure. I can only hope whoever buys the land and end up demolishing this house will save all the good stuff. Thank you so much stay safe and much love
@tiffanye9776
@tiffanye9776 Жыл бұрын
Can you timestamp them? I didn't notice them
@RealmXplore
@RealmXplore Жыл бұрын
@Tiffany E I think she is talking about the ones at 6:35 and you can see other mugs that match the set around the counter 😊 correct me if im wrong though
@tiffanye9776
@tiffanye9776 Жыл бұрын
@@RealmXplore I see them now! Thanks Chris. I've seen those before..maybe at a thrift store? But they could've been cheap copy cats of the real thing. Thrift stores usually know when something valuable is donated. They just don't make em like they used too. Today and everything about it sucks. If I suddenly disappear it's bc God finally answered my prayer to wake up tomorrow 150 years ago
@gypsy4136
@gypsy4136 Жыл бұрын
@ Tiffany. It's so sad that nobody keeps or collects antiques anymore. I have found some of the real McCoy at thrift stores. Hobb nail is another one. It's clear with white polka dot like bubbles on it. The bedroom sets are antique also. So much of the past going to the landfill breaks my heart.
@Raining345
@Raining345 6 ай бұрын
@41:13 this hits me so hard, man. I immediately glanced at our own wedding photo and I felt a rush of sadness at the thought of where it might end up after my love and I are lost to time. I can imagine that these two were so proud of this wedding photo. It probably sat out proudly on display for all guests to see. Yet, it now sits alone in a cold basement for eternity.
@Great-Documentaries
@Great-Documentaries 7 ай бұрын
I love "70s time capsule" homes that were from families so ahead of their times that they had 90s VCRs.
@mds1171
@mds1171 7 ай бұрын
The house was lived in until 2010'ish
@allewis4008
@allewis4008 7 ай бұрын
This home is typical of the War generation: 50s/60s decor, 70s and 80s electronics. My grandparents had an almost identical layout.
@Andrew-bb3lc
@Andrew-bb3lc 7 ай бұрын
That first room you were in was probably the original front or back porch. That’s why there were windows in the wall. Back in the 60s, 70s and 80s, people used to enclose those to make another room to make the house larger.
@JJG84679
@JJG84679 6 ай бұрын
My mother passed away 3 years ago at 92yrs old and left her home to me. I havent changed anything to the decor and so glad i didn't make changes. I spend weekends at the homeplace mostly by myself but at times my older siblings come to visit & share memories/ catch up on family news. It seems odd im living what is depicted in this video.
@hfontanez98
@hfontanez98 6 ай бұрын
This is fascinating. Back in 2000, I purchased a home that was built in 1970 from a person who bought it to flip it after renovations. He obviously didn't touch the attic because some years after I bought the home, I had to do work in the attic and found several boxes (in the shadows) of personal items like photo albums, VHS tapes, etc. I felt weird going through items that belonged to complete strangers. At the same time, it was fascinating to me glancing into their lives. I got to see my house the way it originally looked thru photos and recordings. It also made me feel sad that these people left behind all these recorded memories. We kept things like arts and crafts items we found and basically threw away the rest. As to why they left those things behind, I have a theory. The head of the household was probably in trouble with the government because the U.S. Marshalls came knocking on my door one Saturday morning looking for this guy. Initially, they didn't believe me when I told them I didn't know these people and invited them to interview the neighbors to confirm my story. They did and left me alone after that. This theory was also reinforced by the fact that one of my neighbors told me the story of them moving and, according to him, they were in a hurry to move.
@jameysummers1577
@jameysummers1577 7 ай бұрын
That medical paper said that the man of the house had stomach cancer and severe inflammation of the esophagous (throat). That was a diagnosis sheet outlining what he was prescribed including Tagamet, Mylanta, and Dilaudid 2mg. I'll tell you what. That Dilaudid is some really really reaslly strong narcotic pain medication. He must have been suffering. That paper means that he went to the ER and they admitted him. That paper is a discharge paper that they sent him home with.
@towardsthetimeless12
@towardsthetimeless12 6 ай бұрын
Where does it show in the video ? Give more details how the couple died ?
@themiddlekid1966
@themiddlekid1966 6 ай бұрын
And also from the telephone you can catch the phone number
@alexac921
@alexac921 4 ай бұрын
Ugh Dilaudid is no joke, for sure. Poor man. 😔
@AbrasiousProductions
@AbrasiousProductions 7 ай бұрын
it's making me somewhat emotional that I don't live in a home this beautiful, I prefer this over any mansion any day
@piscesempress1978
@piscesempress1978 6 ай бұрын
Dont give up, one day you will. I love this old house, I would rather have this home than a new 200,000 cookie cutter home.
@AbrasiousProductions
@AbrasiousProductions 6 ай бұрын
@@piscesempress1978 your right, part of my mantra is to think positively, happiness is godliness, thanks for reminding me of that🥰✝
@theJellyjoker
@theJellyjoker Жыл бұрын
This reminds me so much of my grandparents' home in the mid to late 1990's.
@RealmXplore
@RealmXplore Жыл бұрын
That is awesome 👊 thank you Jeff!!!
@donnabrown4349
@donnabrown4349 7 ай бұрын
I am guessing someone lived in here until the late 1980's
@Akutukananu
@Akutukananu 7 ай бұрын
Same here
@munroborisenko7278
@munroborisenko7278 8 ай бұрын
With all of these homes I always wonder why the children or even grand kids would not want any of the photos or other things ? Surely the children knew their parents passed. Strange and sad to leave the photos to rot. I am now a new subscriber. I love the way you pay attention to the details and also pan the camera slowly so it doesn't blur. Great job :)
@RealmXplore
@RealmXplore 8 ай бұрын
Thank you very much and welcome to the channel!!!
@nannacaroline3697
@nannacaroline3697 7 ай бұрын
Yes I'm all about the photos also, so sad
@frankrizzo4460
@frankrizzo4460 7 ай бұрын
Yeah I can't understand how this place has been sitting there for so long and how is it possible that no family member on both sides cleaned out the place years ago. Also letting so many people inside to look around, it just seems weird that there's nobody claiming this house.
@sweetwillow
@sweetwillow 7 ай бұрын
@@frankrizzo4460 I wondered the same but then I also though it could be that sadly the rest of the family is not financially stable enough to up-keep a house. Houses need a lot of up-keep and now that this house looks like it’s received a bit of damage it will cost some money to get it back and functioning again. There is also gas, water, electric and possibly properly taxes to pay, lawn mowing and gardening. All I have to say is that I would love to have inherited a house 🤣 people just can’t afford them these days and it’s quite twisted to see houses go un lived in 😣
@frankrizzo4460
@frankrizzo4460 7 ай бұрын
@@sweetwillow Yeah your right the cost would be a lot of some people, at least try to collect all your personal items inside the house so that people aren't looking at it. Thanks for your reply.
@emmamunro7208
@emmamunro7208 7 ай бұрын
This was definitely not a horder house. Whoever lived here took great care ❤
@lonestar1637
@lonestar1637 6 ай бұрын
I agree.
@Zman817
@Zman817 7 ай бұрын
It's not uncommon to find 1-2 refrigerators in the basement. Often back then people would upgrade to a new one and the old was relocated downstairs. The old latch door type Frigidaire probably still works. They just don't die. My Fathers house still has one in the basement that works from when my grandparents owned it. I remember being a kid and getting the warning not to try and hide inside of it because you can't get out. Also pretty neat that there was still a rumpus room in the basement as well. (Edit: Just noticed the steam pipes in the basement look like they still have the original Asbestos wrap.)
@deborahstone9696
@deborahstone9696 7 ай бұрын
Only bad thing about the old fridge is they don't have a latch inside.just in case a child gets locked in.
@matty5981
@matty5981 9 ай бұрын
Strange how their is no dust or cobwebs anywhere, very clean and new looking.
@TitaniumTurbine
@TitaniumTurbine 7 ай бұрын
A lot of what makes up dust is just dead skin cells from humans and other mammals. My guess would be that she kept a clean house and then some family came through afterwards and quickly gathered some items. There’s no water damage either that I can see so I’m guessing this house was (and hopefully still is) sealed up pretty well.
@pameladircks-meacham5181
@pameladircks-meacham5181 8 ай бұрын
I don't think they were hoarders! I think the family went in there took what they wanted and just put the stuff they didn't want into that room! pretty cool house!!
@illiniwood
@illiniwood 7 ай бұрын
I love seeing homes like this stuck in time. This home reminds me of my childhood. Even the orange chair brings back memories of my mother sitting in this very same one, color and all.
@warmsignal
@warmsignal 7 ай бұрын
I have doubts that it's been abandon as long as it appears. Older people usually don't get rid of their old stuff or update their homes or anything for many years. It's really just very depressing to see what becomes of our legacy after we're gone. Quickly we are forgotten and everything that represented our lives, becomes a pile of dusty garbage.
@LordSluggo
@LordSluggo 7 ай бұрын
Based on some of those labels in the kitchen I'd say late 90's/2000's at the earliest (also the EnergyStar label on the water heater in the basement)
@sicks6six
@sicks6six 7 ай бұрын
in the mid 1960s where I lived all the old houses were being torn down and new homes built, a row of shops stood closed unused for ages so we started to break into them and flats above them, one flat had the doorway bricked up at the bottom of stairs so there was no way into it except via the hole in the wall we made, anyways it was a time capsule as well but form the 1940s, newspapers dated it to just before the end of WW2, there were ammo boxes with 303 rounds in, a hand grenade, wardrobes full of clothes, army jackets trousers etc gas masks, tin hats, army boots, I think someone had been stealing army surplus from the army navy stores and hiding there and when the end of war was near they panicked for some reason and sealed the flat up, it had all the furniture in, carpets, curtains, everything, all crockery and cutlery, it was like someone had just shut the door and left, but this was 20 years later, we knew the owner of the shop below had been a bit of a rook and he had died.
@Jjangbunbun
@Jjangbunbun 7 ай бұрын
So cool
@anxiousmofo6673
@anxiousmofo6673 7 ай бұрын
I bet almost all of those electronics like the TV sets, Emerson stereo, Rotary phone, kitchen appliances, ETC, all still work.
@michaelmorgan7893
@michaelmorgan7893 7 ай бұрын
I recognize all that stuff. Mom had dishes, cups, spice and flour boxes just like those. Even that big ol' microwave that in the 80's costed over $300. Now you can get a used microwave for $25 at a thrift store. The stools, the chairs with the wood back rail... We had all of that stuff too. Kinda sad, it brings back memories as if I was back in Hanford with my Mom.
@JOsKosID
@JOsKosID 7 ай бұрын
If only those old abandoned houses could talk, they would have a lot of interesting stories to tell. 😍
@Hamza-xc9kb
@Hamza-xc9kb 6 ай бұрын
So true my friend! :(
@LynneUK1
@LynneUK1 7 ай бұрын
My husband had Hodgkin's lymphoma when we were first married , thirty odd years ago. It's cancer of the lymphatic system. He recovered after chemo and radiotherapy and it's never returned.
@MeadeSkeltonMusic
@MeadeSkeltonMusic 7 ай бұрын
Praise the Lord 🙏
@TitaniumTurbine
@TitaniumTurbine 7 ай бұрын
@@MeadeSkeltonMusic Meade??? No freaking way. I just randomly came across your comment while watching this and had a LOT of flashbacks. Wow. I just have to ask… you’re the same Meade from the IMDB Soapbox from almost two decades ago, right? I might be mistaken, but I also seem to recall the excellent cover you did of “Your Song” back then. Just so you know, I am (and was then) a friendly. 😊
@MeadeSkeltonMusic
@MeadeSkeltonMusic 7 ай бұрын
@@TitaniumTurbine yes I was on IMDB many moons ago
@bitsbobs8158
@bitsbobs8158 7 ай бұрын
Cool video. Not sure they passed away in the 70s though as half the items in there is from the 80s and 90s. Like the VCR. It's in surprisingly good shape. No nature grown inside, no dead stuff or any real decay. Maybe because it's a wood house. 🤔 Lots of mice poop though. You can see theyve been going for the sugar. Lol
@michaeltammaro9434
@michaeltammaro9434 7 ай бұрын
Somebody in another comment was able to find who lived there. Scroll up to read that. The husband died in 1983 and she passed in 2010.
@allewis4008
@allewis4008 7 ай бұрын
Definitely some early 90s products, roughly 91-92
@user-pu2mu5xt8m
@user-pu2mu5xt8m 2 ай бұрын
Im 64 and blessed having all my memories still intact 😊 I grew up during the 60's and 70's in "Taylor Michigan" I remember the Tigers winning the "World Series" in 1968 as an 8 year old ? And again 16 years later in "1984" as a 24 year old ! But sadly that's now been 40 years 😢 without a World Series Championship ! I also remember boxing at the Kronk Gym at Junction and Mcgraw back in the mid-70's 😏 i remember Micky Goodwin loaning me his pro training gloves during my first sparring session 😮! I remember having a stingray bike with that banana seat back in "1970" 😊 So many memories 😢 ? I remember getting married in "July 1980" as a 20 year old in Ecorse Michigan ! Wow 😊
@okiecubsfan1961
@okiecubsfan1961 5 ай бұрын
Love seeing these houses since i was born in 1961. Remember a lot of this stuff. Sad its just left to rot.
@Kristina-mm9ih
@Kristina-mm9ih 7 ай бұрын
My parents kept all of their important paperwork in the freezer also, they said it was to protect it from fire.
@drprogensteinphp
@drprogensteinphp 6 ай бұрын
This home was definitely not abandoned during the 1970s. VHS weren't around until the 1980s, and that model Quasar VCR and Fuji HQ VHS tape would be early-mid-1990s. Also, many things within this video look to be staged. Even if it had been abandoned during the mid-1990s sometime (30 years ago), there would be a lot more dust on the shelves, the VCR, the vinyl LPs, the puzzle box, the tables, etc. In fact the dust would be so heavy, it would resemble dirt. Oh, and the 900 MHz frequency range cordless phones we're not available to consumers until the mid-1990s. Maybe it's time to retitle your video. Nice try.
@ladylove4087
@ladylove4087 2 ай бұрын
I know people be getting on her telling lies and posting lies about dead people and people they don't even know .
@SavyBajaBuster
@SavyBajaBuster 2 ай бұрын
VHS was 1976 with betamax year earlier..we had a VHS recorder in 79 so they were around...
@FrankiesFancy
@FrankiesFancy 15 күн бұрын
I beg to differ...my mother in law bought her first vcr (replacing her beta max machine) in 1978. The old console TV could have been from the late 1960s judging by the knobs. I had an amazing console with cabinets, a radio and a record player from 1963. So we had those things. Those film editing devices were screaming expensive back in the day. The husband must have had a great paying job but before phones, there was celluloid film and you could edit images, cutting them out or adding extra film for titles, etc. This house was a total blast from the past, right down to the "Ivory Snow" laundry soap that my mother used. Wow...great find. So sad to see these things just rotting. The dressers in each bedroom would go for tens of thousands of dollars...especially with the matching bed frames cheats of drawers. Nice...
@glorydays1670
@glorydays1670 7 ай бұрын
So sad that all those things were forgotten. I grew up in 70s., We had the same things. Toaster oven, swivel chairs, living room lamp, those yellow measuring cups...I would take those in a a heartbeat. The family was not creative in displaying or donating these. :( Family just came and took what they wanted and left everything else. We used Jean Nate growing up. It was a beautiful home at one point I'm sure.
@rebeccayood5152
@rebeccayood5152 6 ай бұрын
What I find really heartbreaking is that no one in the family took the old family photos. That's all the memories of the people who have passed away. This was their lives and memories. Truly heartbreaking 💔.
@Zazen777
@Zazen777 7 ай бұрын
I don't know how I came upon this video, it just showed up, but I really enjoyed it. Thank you for sharing your exploration. Side note, as a former book collector, I really appreciate some of the reading selections that this couple had. One of the books I noticed is worth between $40-60 dollars because it is out of print, there's a small demand for it, and it has been out of print for some time. I also noticed a lamp in one of the bedrooms that is roughly worth $200.00. I noticed some other treasures, too. Anyway, great video. I enjoyed this.
@RealmXplore
@RealmXplore 7 ай бұрын
Thank you!!
@kenshirome83
@kenshirome83 6 ай бұрын
It’s weird how little we own which seems valuable to others. It’s also interesting to see the things that are obviously newer (10-20 years old) compared to the older (25-50 years old).
@grannymagnoliamercury2376
@grannymagnoliamercury2376 6 ай бұрын
She was not a hoarder, people went through all of the belongings taking everything of value and made a mess of it. That home was filled with such life once.
@3v3theoracle
@3v3theoracle 6 ай бұрын
I love that you respect the items and don’t really move them or take them. I worry about you gaining a spiritual attachment if you go to many places like this, but you seem like you know what you’re doing. How beautiful to see such remnants of humanity. ❤
@Hamza-xc9kb
@Hamza-xc9kb 6 ай бұрын
100%
@SchardtCinematic
@SchardtCinematic 7 ай бұрын
I could easily live in a house decorated like this. I grew up in the 70's
@Swampzoid
@Swampzoid 7 ай бұрын
The house really looks more ransacked and picked over than that of a hoarder. It could have been a pleasant place before they died. .Also, the sofa looks more like 1980's or even 1990's style as well as other items.
@jeffl1460
@jeffl1460 7 ай бұрын
I bought a large old New England house once and it was completely furnished with everything. It was actually like going into someones home. Everything was left behind. Bedrooms full of personal stuff in the dressers and shelves. trophies, cloths, photo albums, nick nacks, shoes, electronics, TV's sterios, beds, couches, and the like. Kithen, pantry full, pots, pans, silverware. microwave, table chairs, pictures on the walls, everything. The story was that the family had had enough and wanted to move somewhere warmer. So when the youngest child finally graduated highs school. The parents, afer the celebation at the school, loaded the family into the truck and just left from the school. They put the keys on the mantle, shut the door and left. It was kinda spooky but after the sale/close. I had Estate sale and selling evrything off. But it was sad to see all the stuff belonging to the teen age kids just left behind.
@annc1956
@annc1956 7 ай бұрын
A lot of our grandparents back then grew up in the depression. Many of our grandparents, such as the people who owned this house, canned, cooked a lot and had freezers in their basements. BTW they also had "party lines" on their phones. Watch Andy Griffith show and you will see how the operator put the calls through. You couldn't make a phone call until the line was clear. My grandmother had a party line when I was a child. I recognize a lot of these things. So glad my parents did not have the paneled walls, but some people did, but mostly in one room not the entire house. The avocado (green) and gold chairs are classic. Avocado and Gold were the colors of the 1970s.
@Akutukananu
@Akutukananu 7 ай бұрын
My grandmother kitchen still has this paint on her kitchen walls!
@tempest411
@tempest411 7 ай бұрын
Don't forget burnt orange! I remember as a kid in the 70s, looking around and thinking...this is really, really ugly. The 70s had some pretty good music, but the decor was terrible!
@digikitty11
@digikitty11 7 ай бұрын
I used to go to a lot of estate sales and was surprised when a lot of them had a whole house full of belongings that family or even distant relatives didn't want. Not sure how much the estate sale company made off of selling or getting rid of things that didn't sell, but in a lot of cases the decedent's family very simply wanted whatever monies they could realize from sales and not any of the furniture or other valuables-belongings-scrapbooks-photos, etc. left behind. I've seen lots of valuable jewelry, even cars that nobody wanted and the family or administrator just hired an estate sales company to come in and get rid of everything.
@misscattie7225
@misscattie7225 6 ай бұрын
With respect, sometimes it's not as simple as wanting/not, personal possessions left behind. If the estate is divided amongst more than just family, say a church/charity, is included, and the estate items are required to go through probate (if not set up within the confines of a trust), then the executor/trix, would be bound to have those assets appraised and sold to allow the charitable beneficiary to collect on their portion of the legal proceeds generated by said estate. Sad but true....been there, experienced that, and my heart still breaks.
@Sarahbuildsstepsequencers
@Sarahbuildsstepsequencers 7 ай бұрын
That thing that puzzled you is a picture slide viewer. Old cameras had film and whenever you brought it to be developed, you’d write down whether you wanted photo prints or photo slides or both. You saw and I.D’d several picture slides. What I am wondering is how do you locate such houses? This is so fascinating!
@Ctrl-XYZ
@Ctrl-XYZ 6 ай бұрын
Actually its a splicer for editing reels of 8-miilimeter movie film.
@tracycook1250
@tracycook1250 6 ай бұрын
I don’t know how I landed here, but I’m so glad I stayed for a look around. This looks so much like my grandparents’ house from the 80’s, down to the Last Supper and the foam wig head. The buttons, yarn, and craft supplies went right to my heart. My Grandma must have crocheted a hundred snowpeople and other xmas stuff. You’ve got a new fan. Cheers!
@johnnybravoBoyah
@johnnybravoBoyah 6 ай бұрын
Ditto ,Tracy lol
@louise3993
@louise3993 6 ай бұрын
So many memories came flooding back to me watching this video. So many cool treasures. The cedar chest, the white lamp in the creepy doll room. I remember buying my mom a spice rack that hung on the wall. The old Microwave reminded me of the first one I had. Cost over $200. We had to really save for that one in the seventies. They probably canned food a lot of food. I remember my mom and I doing that. Growing up we had 4 refrigerators and one big freezer. That canned food is safe to eat. Not sure how you were breathing with all that mold. So glad I found this channel.
@karalianisthmus8548
@karalianisthmus8548 6 ай бұрын
My son and I really enjoyed your video!!! I like the parts where you show expiration dates on items and titles of books and albums. It gives a good sense of what the people were into and when they left. Thank you. Oh, please wear gloves bc mice leave shit and urine behind too 😊
@cocolu815
@cocolu815 7 ай бұрын
Interesting. Thanks for showing... I was laughing... You kept pointing out items of interest to you.. i.e. puzzles, a barrel... lot's of stuff.. Meanwhile, you by passed a lot of stuff I was interested in... those mid century floral print lawn chair seat covers.. and some boxes that had similar print... I kept yelling.. STOP. . ha ha
@MissDarkminded
@MissDarkminded 7 ай бұрын
It’s so sad to se that people have gone into the hose and just scavenging thing around…😢 -sad that the family members sit leave it all and not taking care of the property, house and the things left behind. Here in Norway, if someone dies, and there’s no one to take care of the estate, the government will. Then they set a value to everything, sell or donate what they can and then, if it’s some debts left by the deceased, pay that, and the rest will go back to the living family. So here there are almost NO a banded houses with no ownership. And that is very good to know. I love that we have much more proper rules and 😢regulation on many things. Thank you so much for sharing and for paying respect to the previous owners. Alto for investigating the past owners.❤❤❤
@reneastle8447
@reneastle8447 5 ай бұрын
It would be a miracle to see this house restored to its retro mint condition.
@amijoroberts2560
@amijoroberts2560 7 ай бұрын
Scrolling thru random suggestions the cover photo for this grabbed my attention & i couldnt stop watching! It was like jumping into a time machine back to my childhood! To add to my infatuation, as an adult i bought my house from an elderly widow. Shed bought the house as a newlywed 50 yrs prior, raised their family & stayed till her husband passed & she went to a nursing home. It was the only home theyd had their entire married life! She left so many litle clues tht told their story. My house looked sooo much like this one when i closed on it, from the almost identical bathroom, fixtures & all (but my tiles were pink) to the dead plants in the basement! Only i had 2 lrg rms of orng/yllw/brwn shag carpet to contend with, i kept waiting for u to find some there! The pic albums & leftover framed ones bout broke my heart, someones treasured memories one day, trash for someone else to remove the next. I cant imagine not rescuing at least those from my family's belongings! Cant wrap my head around how y no one wanted those! Im in love wth the 2 dolls on the couch wth their carefully crocheted dresses! My Maw-maw, Granny & all my Aunts/grt aunts had at least 1, usually 1 on every bed in their house, of those in the early 80's Their outfits usually included matching bloomers as well. And they all had a smaller one tht matched on the back of their toilets, hiding the spare roll off tp. These were prized possesions & stritly off limits to us kids! 🙂 i noticed yarn in her dresser drawers, she probly crocheted those dresses herself. Im so glad i accidently stumbled on this video, i watched some parts twice & ill probly b binge wathing the rest of ur stuff next. I really appreciated the respectful way u handled things, & ur a good narrator, some ppl have such a droning, monotonous voice tht they ruin entire videos, some just seem to ramble on wth uninteresting chatter, )like me with this comment lol) and even worse is the immature, disrespectful ones tht make stupid remarks about things they find or disregard everything they touch. Thanx for not making ur videos like that ( & for having a decent voice!) -sincerely an (easily amused & overly excited) new follower
@RealmXplore
@RealmXplore 7 ай бұрын
Thank you sooo much really loved your comment. Thank you very much for all the compliments and welcome to the channel my friend.
@djronniebruno
@djronniebruno 7 ай бұрын
and being very handsome doesn't hurt either.🥰
@KnottsBear-yTalesPreserved
@KnottsBear-yTalesPreserved 7 ай бұрын
My cousins in LA once had a home in an apartment and man, the original style and furniture was still the 1970s. The way my Dad seen it back when he spent the night there after working at the Los Angeles Sports Arena during the time of the Pink Floyd's The Wall concert. He took a few of that original furniture when our cousins sold their home this past year.
@LittleMolasses
@LittleMolasses 7 ай бұрын
Wow, interesting! If you wonder about papers in the freezer: my Dad was a firefighter in the 1960's, and they taught them to store important papers in the freezer. Many think that's a myth, but he say many instances where papers were saved from fire that way. The thing on the living room end table--the two arms sticking up have tabs to put movie reels (such as home movies). Perhaps for splicing them? The book you opened--a Perry Mason mystery.
@88corinutza
@88corinutza 7 ай бұрын
They've always said you can't TAKE it with you , Although i did see a Hearse pulling a U-Haul trailer about a year ago.
@TOOCOOLSALEM
@TOOCOOLSALEM 7 ай бұрын
I love your videos, you are very respectful, someone raised you well😊
@JacquelineSamm68
@JacquelineSamm68 Жыл бұрын
What a treasure trove! Thanks for sharing 🔥
@RealmXplore
@RealmXplore Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much for watching Jackie!!!!
@pheenobarbidoll2016
@pheenobarbidoll2016 7 ай бұрын
This makes me so sad.
@ulknatmelknatu
@ulknatmelknatu 7 ай бұрын
This episode was very puzzling.
@Truthman45
@Truthman45 7 ай бұрын
Why?
@markh6545
@markh6545 7 ай бұрын
I am surprised a homeless person hadn't moved in there to have shelter.
@Catgirl88
@Catgirl88 Жыл бұрын
Binge watching all my favorite time capsule houses today.Its raining here so this is a good way to spend the day.As a collector of tabloids and magazines from the 70-90s each time I see this video, seeing the magazines brings a smile to my face 🤗
@RealmXplore
@RealmXplore Жыл бұрын
Hey Colleen that is awesome thank you for watching 😁
@Catgirl88
@Catgirl88 Жыл бұрын
Awww you're welcome 🐕
@coolbluelights
@coolbluelights 7 ай бұрын
Looks like there's handwritten instructions on how to use the microwave on the inside of the cabinet door. Silent Generation people (born between 1925-1945) seem to do that a lot. I see a date on that medical paperwork of 2/29/83 The little TV looking things are film splicers/viewers for 8mm home movie film. they were used in the days before VHS. it's for editing and repairing movie films.
@MeadeSkeltonMusic
@MeadeSkeltonMusic 7 ай бұрын
My dad is 89 and he still does that
@minounah
@minounah 7 ай бұрын
It's the books and the puzzles that get me. People who were down to earth, curious and intelligent. A full life left behind.
@DeerbrookSouthernRR
@DeerbrookSouthernRR 7 ай бұрын
That “Florida room” was definitely an addition. My grandmas house was very similar. They enclosed the patio. The windows are part of the original exterior wall
@kathyperez9695
@kathyperez9695 7 ай бұрын
wow! This is so awesome. I remember this decor, when i was little visiting my grandmothers home❤
@BeachLife61
@BeachLife61 7 ай бұрын
Wow Charlie Weaver was iconic, I can remember coming home from school, and my grandmother waiting for us with muffins for our afternoon snack, sitting around the kitchen table , watching Hollywood squares, and laughing at Charlie weaver after cracking jokes with Paul lynde ( they were iconic comedians in the 60’s/70’s! Those records of great music artist ..everything just blows me away 🩷
@bandesj
@bandesj 7 ай бұрын
Charlie Weaver was the alter ego of actor Clifford Charles Arquette, grandfather of the Arquette acting family (David, Rosanna, etc.)
@TomyIneXtriCable
@TomyIneXtriCable 5 ай бұрын
I watched this at night with some SH ambience and rain in the background... Thanks for this!
@spencerbergquist781
@spencerbergquist781 7 ай бұрын
Well that first machine that puzzled you is a slide projector. People sometimes had their film developed into slides instead of pictures since it was cheaper, but you needed some type of machine to view them. The second mystery is a film editor. They had either an 8 mm or super 8 mm camera, and this machine allowed them to edit their developed film and splice films together, since film packs ran about 5 minutes. with this machine you could splice films together
@RealmXplore
@RealmXplore 7 ай бұрын
Thank you spencer!
@dalemcdonald9804
@dalemcdonald9804 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video glad to see you back out there , be safe out there it looks like this one will be amazing a lot of cool stuff left behind. Until next time from Georgia much love my friend 👍👃❤️
@RealmXplore
@RealmXplore Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much Dale be safe out there and much love my friend
@biganttony6786
@biganttony6786 7 ай бұрын
looks like my grand parents house. Makes me cry and laugh at the same time, great memories. So close to home it's ridiculous.
@D9Beats
@D9Beats 7 ай бұрын
Holy crap. Looks just like a house I lived in 5 years ago. Man!
@julieneal492
@julieneal492 7 ай бұрын
The orange chair is everything 🧡🧡🧡
@noscrubbubblez6515
@noscrubbubblez6515 7 ай бұрын
That's a Top of the Line camel back sofa @1:00. Made by Sumter, South Carolina. It has 8-way hand tied spring foundation and perfectly tailored (stripes match) woven fabric with shiny bit of rayon in the weave. It is not disposable with true hardwood construction and I estimate late 1980's production. It's 86 inch length is slightly smaller than most. They invested some money in that one.
@Wildflower-ue8qm
@Wildflower-ue8qm 9 ай бұрын
This pad literally brought tears to my eyes. Think back in the 70's when life was so much more everything! For example, when time was so much less complicated. Technology in so many ways has changed everything. And not always for the better!!!! From how long it takes to speak to someone for what would have been a simple phone call to your Dr., pharmacy, electric company, etc. No explanation needed. A time when you weren't constantly trying to locate the lost remote control, a time when we could sleep with our doors unlocked and windows open. Without the fear of being raped r murdered. A time when you could run into the P.O. or convenience store and leave your car running without fear of it being stolen. A time when homelessness was never seen on the streets. Or drug addicts hanging out everywhere you looked. It was a time when if you did not have a car because it broke down and you had to save up money to fix it. As a single mother, you could hitchhike at 5am in hopes of getting to work 30 miles away and not even think about not making it to work in one piece. A time when you could drive into a movie theatre, go to a store, or even school, etc. and not worry about some random killer murdering you.Yes, this pad is a great reminder of the groovier, less complicated, and much safer times. What a wonderful video. A video bringing memories back of a past long gone. 😢 I feel so blessed to have been able to live in an era when peace and love were practiced. And violence of any kind was frowned down upon. Many items in the home I also owned in my early 20's. Thank you, sir, for bringing back those memories. Memories never to be remade by attempting to replicate. Such as the original Woodstock, fads, music, etc. The only thing that still remains as was is classic rock n roll. That Edibiewer was a old fashioned film editor with a film cutter. What a great video. Thank you for making my day! P€ac€ ~n~ £0v€
@RealmXplore
@RealmXplore 9 ай бұрын
Hey Wildflower thank you so much!! Really loved your comment my friend much love
@stevenfenton3227
@stevenfenton3227 8 ай бұрын
Multicultural
@Johnketes54
@Johnketes54 8 ай бұрын
I still call my pharmacy, I could do it online but never have, Somethings are online only and covid helped instead of traipsing to offices to give information i send a email on my phone, Can't find the remote control? Then get off your arse and use the manual controls, Now if you can't remember a actors name but remember the movie(film) Google it and run through cast, see a name on a park bench Google it and discover the woman toured America in a dancing troupe all from that park bench on my phone from the south east of England and the same with gravestones or words you have never heard off resolved in seconds
@georgiafloyd1079
@georgiafloyd1079 7 ай бұрын
I agree with you,my husband used to say when population becomes too much humans will act like rats in a overcrowded cage. They fight and kill each other the way it is now. 😞
@georgiafloyd1079
@georgiafloyd1079 7 ай бұрын
What is wrong with children who do not care about the old house they grew up in.
@tj921able
@tj921able 7 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing this! I loved all of it! God Bless You & stay safe.
@kateshane8277
@kateshane8277 7 ай бұрын
Good pick from the algorithm. Wonderful 1970s time capsule. I'll definitely check out your other videos!
@RealmXplore
@RealmXplore 7 ай бұрын
Thank you very much Kate and welcome to the channel!!
@CCsDomain
@CCsDomain 5 ай бұрын
Wow, thats wild. So many antiques. The doors upstairs looked to be in really good shape also. Great Job Filming. Thank You for Sharing.
@RealmXplore
@RealmXplore 5 ай бұрын
Thank you 🙏
@damian9303
@damian9303 7 ай бұрын
I love how naturally deteriorated the home has become from being exposed to the elements, not all the vandalism from recklessness. Makes it feel lived in, love the stained woodgrain and the ceramic souvenirs.
@natekeyes2297
@natekeyes2297 7 ай бұрын
Did you ask yourself where all the dust was? Unless the house was hermetically sealed, all of that stuff would have been smothered in dust.
@joshbutler3755
@joshbutler3755 7 ай бұрын
@@natekeyes2297 This was deff set up to re-create what a house looked like back then. Plus the way everything was laid out it looked like an exhibit. And like you said, where is the dust? If I didn't dust my house for a month it would be more dusty than this place....lol. Not a bad re-creation though.
@hlavco
@hlavco 7 ай бұрын
@@natekeyes2297 A good portion of house dust comes from peoples' skin. If nobody's living there and the house is sealed from the elements, you won't have a lot of dust.
@Neophema
@Neophema 7 ай бұрын
@@hlavco Exactly. I dusted my furniture before I went on a 12 day holiday this summer, and when I got back, there was still no dust. Three days later, I could see the dust settling from me being back in the house. How do people not know this?
@brandyrapoza6489
@brandyrapoza6489 5 ай бұрын
Wow what a flashback for me. 😮is like having a 360 view of my childhood home from the mid 80's minus the beads in doorways 😂. My mom was a hippie. 75% of the stuff i saw was in my own home. Right down to the blue ceramic sugar bowl in the kitchen & the spice rack on the wall. What a trip! Thank you this was great.
@jenniferburchill3658
@jenniferburchill3658 7 ай бұрын
This could have been my Grandma's house... it makes me sad to see houses just abandoned like this.
@bigbluegr8ness383
@bigbluegr8ness383 7 ай бұрын
Stepping inside places like this truly feels like traveling back in time very cool video 👍🏻
@Truthman45
@Truthman45 7 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed sir 👍
@lorijeanneancrayne1965
@lorijeanneancrayne1965 Жыл бұрын
I'm still watching, lol just wanted to jump in and say hi😁 still working. I love that flour, sugar thingy, lol that was pretty cool. I'm thinking someone may have passed away. Sometimes family members can't bring themselves to go back into the house. Sad but it does happen. The vinyl records I think they'd be worth some money. What an amazing place to explore. Have a great day Chris ❣️ Thanks for sharing your adventure with us ♥️ stay safe and much love.
@RealmXplore
@RealmXplore Жыл бұрын
Hey Lori thank you for stopping by to say hello 😊I agree i think they did pass away there. found some medical records......in the freezer lol Have a great weekend Lori stay safe much love
@user-pr9hy4jl6k
@user-pr9hy4jl6k 6 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing this!
@spookieghost
@spookieghost 6 ай бұрын
"I really would wanna go to Yellowstone". LOL. Why do I love that part so much?
@Catgirl88
@Catgirl88 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for such a interesting time capsule house.May the former owners r.i.p.
@RealmXplore
@RealmXplore Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much Colleen for watching 😀
@Catgirl88
@Catgirl88 Жыл бұрын
Awww you're welcome,sir. PS I'm a southerner .We address everyone as either sir or mam.❤️
@RealmXplore
@RealmXplore Жыл бұрын
Love it lol Yes Mam 😁
@Catgirl88
@Catgirl88 Жыл бұрын
🤗🤗🤗
@Natashas-life
@Natashas-life 7 ай бұрын
That box you had questions about on the table, was to view negatives from the rolls of film. My mom had a more updated one. There is a lite inside of it to light up the backside of a negative, so you can view it as the size of a picture. That way you could choose what pictures you wanted to print. Such a beautiful home, vintage. I love older houses, so much character, and the cupboards were built to last.
@Ctrl-XYZ
@Ctrl-XYZ 6 ай бұрын
That's not for viewing negatives. It's a splicer for editing 8-millimeter movie film. The arms are for the supply and take-up reels. And the box your mom had was a 35mm slide viewer. Slides are the opposite of negatives.
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