is for Adler
is for Blickensderfer
is for Crandall
is for Diskret
is for Edison
is for Franklin
is for Graphic
is for Hanson
is for Imperial
is for Junior
is for Keystone
is for Lambert
is for Merritt
is for Niagara
is for Oliver
is for Pettypet
is for Quiet-Riter
is for Remington
is for Salter
is for Toshiba
is for Underwood
is for Victor
is for Williams
is for Xcel
is for Yetman
is for Zephyr
(images for the above typewriter keys are here)
I was started on this by this alphabet which appeared on Letterology.
P is for The Pen Room in Birmingham, England, where they let you take them down from the shelf and use them
How wonderful. In my searching I found a picture of a different model of the one above.
http://www.typewritermuseum.org/collection/index.php3?machine=indexmignon2&cat=is
“I” is for impressed.
Lovely work Mss Ying! Interesting that function following form in some of these creates an ‘ergonomic’ design! Of all of them, the Hanson is the only one that strikes me with the question “what the hades were they thinking?” A design for former crystal ball readers, perhaps?
With my compliments, Miss Ying:
[img_assist|nid=3531|title=Xcel Standard and Word Writing typewriter|desc=1922|link=popup|align=none|width=304|height=343]
http://books.google.com/books?id=NHdQAAAAYAAJ&lpg=PA396&ots=rg4ZGn0esD&dq=%22Xcel%20Standard%20and%20Word%20Writing%20typewriter%22&pg=PA396#v=onepage&q=%22Xcel%20Standard%20and%20Word%20Writing%20typewriter%22&f=false
Thank you so much. :) This one is interesting in that each of the keys on the bottom row will type whole words, such as “the, you, was, all”, etc.
And I’ve found one for the letter “Q” so the alphabet is complete.
I have to say that the “simple words” idea is genius. The presesnce of a “.com” button on my iPhone is similarly brilliant.
Too often, brilliant innovations are dashed on the rocks of consumer inertia. How does one break free of that cycle?
Ahhh, the Victor typewriter…. those are the ones that, when you think you’re done typing your document, will sneak off and redo the same document 2-5 times, leaving the poor author with a document that has little resemblance to the original work, no?
rofl! XD
Fantastic! My favorite is the Hanson. It reminds me of the IBM Selectric ball.
/me wonders how many others here learned to “keyboarding” on manual typewriters before anything else.
Probably a good number of us, I would guess.
/me wonders how many of us went off to college with their parent’s typewriter in a box.
Heh.
When I was a kid our typewriter had a cursive typeset. I hated it at the time, but wish I had it now.
Don’t remember the manufacturer, unfortunately.Found it! Olympia Splendid 33. (This one has rain on it.)Had the luxury of an electric typewriter at home and Apple IIe in High School (and a Commodore 64 in the Physics lab).
Never did take proper typing classes.
You kids and your fancy gadgets.
I learned how to type on an Apple IIe at home by playing the old Micropose games!
I started learning on an old-school “portable” typewriter. A monsterous black-and-gold thing that had a peculiar smell about it and had a folding leather case that went over it (Da always said it was because it had been lubed with whale oil. I still don’t believe him.). The number of times I skinned my knuckles because I punched my fingers down between the keys! but man, could I speed away on a regular computer keyboard after that!