I grew up in Baltimore during the post war period; when burlesque still reigned and Baltimore was a collection of ethnic neighborhoods. There was Little Italy and Germantown (but they were all Austrians) and the Polish neighborhood off Pulaski and the Valley was Horse Country and Pimlico was all Jewish (I grew up there and thought the lions really ate all the other Christians since I was the only one left) and there was Chinatown where all the Japanese were Chinese and Downtown Mount Vernon Place that was hotels and statues and the Peabody Conservatory and Enoch Pratt Library and one of my favorite places in the world, The Walter's Art Gallery.
Each neighborhood smelled strange and the folk looked strange and the food was exotic and everyone knew that THEIR neighborhood was the best but the others certainly were wonderful to visit.
Each neighborhood had their own barbers and their own barbershop smells. In Little Italy it was the smell of Mint and Eucalyptus, the Germantown it was fresh tobacco, in Pimlico it was rose water and lavender and in the hotels around Mount Vernon Place it was polished wood and lime and Talcum Powder and in Hunt Valley it was leather and freshly mowed green grass and in Chinatown it was sandalwood and incense.
But it was the barbershops down near the docks, the ones where the merchant seamen frequented, where the stevedores cleaned up for the weekend, where the folks that had been unloading bananas (we used to stand at the dock and sometimes they would show us the critters that hitched a ride in the green bananas; big hairy spiders and snakes of all colors and sometimes even a monkey) or spices and tea for McCormick & Company could be found where you could find the most amazing smells, amber and jasmine and lotus blossom all mixed with the scent of whatever was being processed that day at McCormick; cinnamon or clove or pepper or nutmeg or thyme or basil or lemon grass.
For a young boy out exploring and free from the family insurance office Baltimore was an ever changing education.
Each neighborhood smelled strange and the folk looked strange and the food was exotic and everyone knew that THEIR neighborhood was the best but the others certainly were wonderful to visit.
Each neighborhood had their own barbers and their own barbershop smells. In Little Italy it was the smell of Mint and Eucalyptus, the Germantown it was fresh tobacco, in Pimlico it was rose water and lavender and in the hotels around Mount Vernon Place it was polished wood and lime and Talcum Powder and in Hunt Valley it was leather and freshly mowed green grass and in Chinatown it was sandalwood and incense.
But it was the barbershops down near the docks, the ones where the merchant seamen frequented, where the stevedores cleaned up for the weekend, where the folks that had been unloading bananas (we used to stand at the dock and sometimes they would show us the critters that hitched a ride in the green bananas; big hairy spiders and snakes of all colors and sometimes even a monkey) or spices and tea for McCormick & Company could be found where you could find the most amazing smells, amber and jasmine and lotus blossom all mixed with the scent of whatever was being processed that day at McCormick; cinnamon or clove or pepper or nutmeg or thyme or basil or lemon grass.
For a young boy out exploring and free from the family insurance office Baltimore was an ever changing education.
To be vintage it must be older than me!
The last razor I bought was the next to last razor I will ever buy!
The last razor I bought was the next to last razor I will ever buy!