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Typewriters

Shangas

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,116
Location
Melbourne, Australia
You mean this?

images


...or this?

RoyalPortableO.jpg


I think they both look damn cool. Although I would prefer the first version, if I had to choose only one.

If I could, I'd love to buy a Remington 5 streamline:

remington-5-typewriter-main.jpg


To me, that model SCREAMS the 1930s.
 

p51

One Too Many
Messages
1,119
Location
Well behind the front lines!
I had a few of my typewriters in my War Correspondent display at the Military Vehicle Preservation Association annual convention in Portland, last week.
People marvelled at me actually typing on my Underwood Champion and were blown away when I told them why keyboards still have 'shift' and 'tab' buttons!
MVPAportland001_zps80e2af8c.jpg

MVPAlee4_zps0014b0ca.jpg

MVPAportland084_zps8c1a1215.jpg
 

Shangas

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,116
Location
Melbourne, Australia
Cute typewriter!

I did a similar thing at last year's Melbourne Pen Show...





IMG_0190.jpg




Not as good as yours, obviously. I had to work with what I had. The theme was the 1920s and 30s.

People young and old were all pretty amazed/impressed.

1. That I managed to pull it off.
2. That I knew what I was on about.
3. Like you, quite a few people were pretty surprised about the origins of "SHIFT", "TAB", "BACKSPACE" and "C.C.".

Some items there (telephone, camera, magazines etc) were donated by friends and club-members. Everything else, I brought from home.
 
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Matt Crunk

One Too Many
Messages
1,029
Location
Muscle Shoals, Alabama
A vintage typewriter is a must-have for putting together my Golden-Era style home office. I must start looking for one soon. Since it won't actually be used it doesn't need to be in absolute working order.
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,755
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
So what is the origin of 'shift' and 'tab' other than to change the keys so that a different character can be used?

The "Tab" key is short for "Tabulator" -- it was originally used for typing out balance sheets and other material arranged in columns that would be "tabulated."

The "Shift" key is essential because too many writers are unable to shift for themselves.
 

Shangas

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,116
Location
Melbourne, Australia
The original 'shift' keys shifted the carriage up and down, to adjust for capital letters and secondary characters. That's why it's called a shift-key. In later typewriters, they introduced the Basket Shift, that dropped the basket instead of raising the carriage.

And I love the Royal with Royal Red on the previous page. Very cute!

Does it type like it looks?
 

McPeppers

One of the Regulars
Messages
279
Location
South Florida
Aww, yall are making me mist up. I used to have a typewriter that was unrecoverable after Hurricane Katrina.

Remington No 2 portable from germany. mint with plates. Probably was used for government work.

i miss it terribly


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk - now Free
 

Shangas

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,116
Location
Melbourne, Australia
Currently trying to work my restorative magic on this battered old Underwood which I bought at the flea-market:

IMG_1606_zpsbaa98a95.jpg


I've cleaned out the majority of the gunk. I've glued and braced the spacebar. I've oiled all the stops and most of the moving parts.

I'm currently trying to replace the rubber on the paper-bales and the feed-rollers.

I'm not sure if I can get rubber tubing that will cover the platen. Maybe I can find heat-shrink tubing that will fit, but I'm not sure.

Patent-dates on the back:

 
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The Reno Kid

A-List Customer
Messages
362
Location
Over there...
I had to share this. Our next-door neighbors are a very sweet German couple that we have really grown to like and they joined us for Thanksgiving dinner last Thursday. Our German is worse than their English but we manage. It was a lot of fun and we introduced them to a number of things they had never tried before--yams, green bean casserole, pumpkin pie, stuffing, etc. (Pies of any sort are rare here in Germany). Anyway, as we were sipping eggnog and waiting for dinner to settle to make room for the pie, we were talking about some of the old stuff scattered around our house. We have several old (1930s) radios, telephones, cameras (1890s-1910s), and assorted other items. They hadn't seen my 1926 Royal No. 10, so I brought it out and they loved it.

Skip ahead to this morning (Sunday). Mrs. Reno Kid and I were lazing around in PJs and robes when we heard a knock. I answered it and there was Klaus, holding this:
regina_vii_002.jpg
1926 Regina VII

Apparently it's been gathering dust in the attic for ages and they don't want it, so they gave it to me. Wow! Mechanically and cosmetically, it's almost perfect. It just needs a little oil on the carriage and a new ribbon. The wooden cover will need a new bail for the handle and it has a bit of veneer separation. That's it.

Since I was posting here anyway, here's my Royal:
royal_no_10_002.jpg
1926 Royal No. 10
 
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blakegriplingph

New in Town
Messages
11
Location
San Andreas
Has anyone tried out installing a USB conversion kit on a typewriter? I know it's more or less like utter blasphemy to do that, but the idea of interfacing a typewriter to a PC seems funny.
 

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