By KIM COOK
It might start with a cassette deck that streams Spotify and charges your phone. It doesn’t have to stop there.
These days, yesterday is big business.
A retro revival is underway in the design world : mushroom-shaped lamps, walnut stereo consoles, daisy dishware, neon Polaroid cameras. It’s like our homes just hustled over from “One Day at a Time” or “That ’70s Show” or moonwalked in from “Thriller”-era 1982.
Welcome to the retro reset, where ‘70s, ’80s and ’90s aesthetics are getting a second life. It’s not just in fashion and film but in home décor and tech. Whether you actually lived through it or long for a past you never experienced, nostalgia is fueling a surge of interest from Gen X to Gen Z in throwback styles that blend vintage charm with modern convenience