I share your affinity. Especially for old tools and farm related items. For me its always been more about the people that once used those tools than the actual tools themselves. Folks that built the railroads, laying each tie by hand and the driving every single spike, or the crews that built skyscrapers when every rivot was put in by hand, or the farmer that walked 40 acres behind that single bottom plow, or the rancher who put 10 miles of fence with every post hole hand dug and tamped. I'd like to think that the spirit and work ethic of these folks from yesteryear is somehow captured in those tools that they used.
My father was one of those farmers, railroad workers and such in his time... he was born in 1914, grew up on a farm, one of 10 kids... they plowed the fields with a team of mules, I don't think he ever drove a tractor until the late 1950-s.... as a young family man, he "borrowed" mules from the neighbors and broke them to work for their use... each year for a few he always had a team of "green" mules to teach them how to pull a load.... when he worked on the railroad, he graded the right of way with a Fresno behind a team of mules. I've seen him put in a corner post on a fence 3 feet deep, digging with post hole diggers, getting down on his knees the last foot so he could get more leverage to drive the diggers down.... hand tamped with the back end of the shovel and when he finished, solid and no wiggle in the post...
When we went to West Texas in the 1948/49 where he worked a farm as a share cropper, he pull cotton with a 6 yard sack on his back, walking on his knees because the cotton didn't get high enough for him to stand...he was 6'3" and bending all day was a killer... the rows were over a mile long... and I've seen him pull a bale of cotton a day by himself... a bale weighs anywhere from 600-1000 lbs when ginned.
He also used to cut cord wood in the summer with a double axe... split it by hand and stacked for sale or use in the house.... when he and mom married they were still using a wood cook stove, but later switched to a kerosene.
I like the old things, but it's so much more convenient to have the newer work tools... I enjoy my lawn tractor, my lathe, electric saws, and such...
I'm into the internet, but carry a cell phone only because I need to, don't have and don't want an IPad or Ipod, or even a lap top... don't need to be connected to the world that much.