[custom_adv] Everything inside is from a bygone era, including the rare wallpaper, coal fires and electric cooker which was one of the first of its kind.Mr Whiteside recalls browsing junk shops aged five, picking up an old radiogram, hoover, mincers and gas lamps during trips with his grandmother's sister. [custom_adv] Since then, he has slowly become enamoured with the decade's style and way of life.The bachelor bought his current home in Blackpool, Lancashire, for £87,000 in 2007 after it had stood empty for nearly a decade. [custom_adv] He has since worked tirelessly to transform the house - installing German wallpaper which was buried in a time capsule in the 1930s and cost him £100 a roll. [custom_adv] He sleeps in a vintage bed, has a GEC cooker, doesn't own a television or fridge and still uses a laundry mangle.Mr Whiteside has spent seven years and more than £10,000 collecting for his dream home. [custom_adv] As one enters the hallway to the house they are met with 1930s style blazers and waistcoats on a hatstand and a small table for letters as old-fashioned trunks sit below. [custom_adv] 'There is the Victorian organ in there as well as a great big Edwardian sideboard.'The kitchen has got the original tiles and sink and cupboards. It's pretty bog standard to how it was when it was built. [custom_adv] 'The hallway is pretty much as it was apart from it's got new wallpaper, it's an old reprint.'The items I have sort of go up to the 1940s. Even at the end of the war, you were still living in the thirties because there was no production.' [custom_adv] Mr Whiteside, who runs Whiteside Windows, is currently single but admits he isn't looking for someone who shares the same interest.He said: 'None of my partners have ever shared the same interests but I think now if I ever met someone they would have to have their own house.