dysonman1
Well-known member
As far as the kid's collections - they can be quite large. The 12 year old who has his entire family drive 4 hours so his birthday party can be in the 1950's room of the Vacuum Cleaner Museum, has about 60 machines I believe. I gave him a Kirby Omega one year, and with his birthday money he bought a brand new Simplicity Wonder canister last year.
Most of the little kids (6, 7, or 8 years old) have vacs they've been given by family members, or machines they talked their parents into buying for them (from thrift stores, etc.) One kid, 6 years old, wanted a Windsor Sensor so bad. Just so happened I had one that I sold his mom for $100 (a good price). Turns out he wanted one because he saw one at the hotel they stayed at, talked to the maid about it, and decided that would be his next machine. Some of these kids are really shy, and others are really NOT shy about what they want. MOST only know modern vacuums, almost all love Sharks and Dysons (but they don't know any better yet).
So that's what the Museum does. It exposes them to all kinds of vacs they will probably never see again. I take time to shown them the REALLY COOL machines of the past such as the Lux LX, the Rexair, the Air-Way Twin Motor upright, etc. As a former child collector myself, I see myself in "SOME" of them so I take as much time as I need with them. Some of the parents have been joys - the kind of parents we ALL would have wanted. A few times, the parents let the kid run wild - to which I put my foot down immediately. After all, we cannot call up Hoover in China and ask them for a new part for a 1926 model 700.
Most of the little kids (6, 7, or 8 years old) have vacs they've been given by family members, or machines they talked their parents into buying for them (from thrift stores, etc.) One kid, 6 years old, wanted a Windsor Sensor so bad. Just so happened I had one that I sold his mom for $100 (a good price). Turns out he wanted one because he saw one at the hotel they stayed at, talked to the maid about it, and decided that would be his next machine. Some of these kids are really shy, and others are really NOT shy about what they want. MOST only know modern vacuums, almost all love Sharks and Dysons (but they don't know any better yet).
So that's what the Museum does. It exposes them to all kinds of vacs they will probably never see again. I take time to shown them the REALLY COOL machines of the past such as the Lux LX, the Rexair, the Air-Way Twin Motor upright, etc. As a former child collector myself, I see myself in "SOME" of them so I take as much time as I need with them. Some of the parents have been joys - the kind of parents we ALL would have wanted. A few times, the parents let the kid run wild - to which I put my foot down immediately. After all, we cannot call up Hoover in China and ask them for a new part for a 1926 model 700.