It’s not unusual to see dates or names during renovations.
But the Shinsekis left much more. Remodeled in 1995. Only 23 years ago. I think the bathroom looked great. I can’t see any reason to blow a big wad of money changing it. If it ain’t broke… don’t fix it. But, it’s not my house. Some people want to put their own mark on their homes. Like a dog and a tree. LOL Sure helps contractors earn a living.
Surprised that the Shinsekis haven’t turned up. They’d be in their mid fifties now.
IT’s cute! I did a time capsule of sorts and stuffed it in the new garage foundation. ALso put something int he bathroom wall come to think of it…what was that, it might’ve been sorta creepy cannot recall for some reason.
My cousin ended up moving into what had been my grandparents’ house. I don’t know the history of the house before my grandparents owned it.
But when we were tearing down a wall to replace it, we found that there were newspapers glued to the interiors of the walls, apparently to insulate out drafts. And the newspapers were dated from 1864. We were able to read articles talking about Grant fighting in Virginia and Lincoln and McClellan’s campaigns for the Presidency.
Older homes have history. Why does thinking about its previous residents having been there and having led their lives there bother you? Does it make you feel like you are intruding into their space and the home less yours somehow?
What makes a little sense of personal history, even trivial personal history, creepy?
I don’t find it creepy at all - I assume they meant it as a joke.
When my parents took down our house’s ratty old wallpaper in the late 1970s, they encouraged my sisters and I to write over the walls before the new wallpaper went up. Haven’t been in the house for 20-some years to see if it’s been changed since.
I heard a sermon from a minister in which he said when he and his family moved into their house, they found this written in small letters underneath a switch plate in a child’s bedroom: THIS IS MY ROOM IN MY HOUSE FOREVER.
When we remodeled one of our houses, we let our daugther draw with chalk on the block wall between the dining room and the garage before we put up the sheetrock. We did it in the early 90s - it’d be interesting to know if anyone tore that wall down since then.