I liked this place. It was organized in a cute manner, with street names down each corridor. Think, front to back, hotdog style, column style, etc. And then the businesses had their own«rooms», with were small booths fashioned in all sorts of manners. Some were like little living room sets, or a bedroom(without the bed), or just piled around in a haphazard way. I love vintage places, vintage clothes, even vintage cookware. While there were some cool iteams, the vintage-ness of them here is definitely questionable. Calling something from the 80s and 90s vintage seems stretching it, to me. But there were a lot of those things. For example, think trolls(yes, those hard plastic figures with a shock of bright colored hair in the shape of an ice cream cone), and even the exact same nickel-plated bear«piggy» bank I had growing up. In both cases, they had vintage claims. In the case of the bear bank, there was no year to indicate just how vintage. I was also really disappointed in the lack of vintage clothes, as well. There was a single dress, priced at $ 20. Of course I loved it, and it was even in my size, but I’d rather wade through Goodwill clothes and find vintage clothes for $ 5 – 7. I will say that the same booth that had the clothes also had a couple of really adorable aprons. Once again, not so sure about the vinatge claims, since the ones I looked at didn’t even have tags or clothing labels. They could have even just been hand sewn creations made in a vintage style. They were between $ 15 – 20 for those, but there was a simply adorable half apron that was red and only $ 6, that I couldn’t pass up. There was also a booth with some neat vintage magazines, Photography Today and a science magazine. They were all between 1940s-early 1950s and going for $ 2. I got a couple, because I love old ads and fashions. What I saw tons of, interestly enough, were vintage trays. A lot of booths had those, as well as jars(of course), and a lot of really cool decanters that probably weren’t vintage, but still looked pretty neat.