It's like a scene straight from Mad Men, except it's in Winnipeg's Grant Park neighbourhood.

A mid-century Hector Bay home still holds the original owners' modernist furniture and the funky wall coverings they put up.

Anne Stadnyk remembers choosing the black-and-white circle-pattern velvet-textured wallpaper for her bedroom back in the 1960s.

Anne Stadnyk thinks she picked the textured black-and-white wallpaper in her old bedroom from a Seventeen magazine when she was about 14. (Janina Nicole Photography)

"I must have picked that from Seventeen magazine, which was popular, I think, in those days when I was about 14 or something like that," says Stadnyk, who grew up in the home in Winnipeg's Grant Park neighbourhood. "They just never changed it, and it looks great."

"They" are Ted and Nettie Stadnyk, who bought the new home in 1961 and filled it with teak furniture, modern design pieces and their own warm take on mid-century design.

It isn't quite in the condition its original owners had kept it in — the green shag carpet has been removed, the mustard yellow walls were painted and the orange sheer curtains covering the large picture windows were removed in preparation for its sale.

Modest (Ted) Stadnyk built the 'sunrise' on the master bedroom wall. A light switch near the bed floods it with light at night. (Janina Nicole Photography)

But it still boasts an orange sunrise with teak rays on the master bedroom wall, with a light that shines up onto it, the work of Ted Stadnyk, an electrician by trade.

"When you put the light on at night, it shines up and looks like a really cool sun," says Anne Stadnyk, their only child.

Anne Stadnyk couldn't part with all of her parents' beautiful teak furniture. She's bringing this dining room suite to her home in Vancouver. (Janina Nicole Photography)

And while she's sold most of the furniture since her mom moved out and her dad died — she's taking the dining room suite back to her home in Vancouver — the home is being sold with the 1960s basement rec room intact, including the furniture.

It was a great place to party with her friends on the swim team, she says.

Anne Stadnyk remembers parties with her swim team in this basement rec room, which boasts the most awesome wood stove possible. (Janina Nicole Photography)

"There's some cool furniture down there," she said. "The big basket chair, I was a competitive swimmer and we went down to the States to swim, and my dad found that down there and brought it up."

Pancake breakfasts with the swim team in the basement were lots of fun, Anne Stadnyk says. (Janina Nicole Photography)

That was about forty years ago, she figures.

"My dad, in particular, was on the creative side," Stadnyk said about her parents, who would have celebrated their 64th wedding anniversary on July 26. "They did a lot of cool things creatively. They both had that talent."

Modest (Ted) Stadnyk's kitchen includes carefully cut wood panelling that matches the parquet floor. (Janina Nicole Photography)

The home is at 1052 Hector Bay East behind Grant Park Shopping Centre.