Yes, that IS possibly the coolest thing in the world.
I personally have a love hate relationship with typewriters, love for the vintage nature of them, hatred because I am a fast typist but with errors. Typically I can get away with about 80wpm with 99% accuracy, but usually I touch type up to about 110-115wpm, usually having to jot back a few times over some words, usually when I am thinking about something else mid-sentence and write a completely different word to what I was supposed to be jotting down.
The fastest I've ever been about to type on a typewriter was 45wpm and that was with a fair few errors. Probably lack of experience is a major key.
What I would love though is a computer for typing, steam-punked with a typewriter, similar to that remington typewriter that was featured all over the net recently.
Would go suitably in a nice study IMHO.
That looks something out of Bioshock. Very cool.
That looks something out of Bioshock. Very cool.
+1Or Brazil.
I've been wanting to get a vintage green Hermes 3000.
I have owned so many cool typewriters that I lost over the years. They always seem to be something that is left behind with, or stolen by the ex girlfriend.Almost fifty years ago I bought a Hermes 3000 in Macy's on Herald Square in New York to type my master's thesis. To this day, I'm sad that I lost it.
They do, and my wife wants one out on display. But dust is the big killer of the old typer. They need to be covered or they are a dust magnet.Manual typewriters are cool. I bought a little Olivetti years ago in Melbourne when I worked for the Federal Government. On night shift I would type out my cheques to post and type the addresses on the envelopes. Still have it in the shed somewhere. I had to change the ribbon to an all black ribbon because for some reason when you typed a letter that was below the line such as a p, the bottom of the letter was in red and the top in black. I think that they look great in a room as decor.
I know. They have become a hipster thing to own. I’ve been hunting a nice Olivetti for a while, but they are always too pricey and/or broken. I bought one off eBay a number of years ago, but it was packed badly, and arrived squashed.I suppose that you could always put one in a glass cabinet if you have one. But I think they look better out on show. Every time I see one in an antique shop I have to have a fiddle with it. Trouble is they want big money for the older ones that are in terrible condition.
Depending on the model and it’s condition, it might well be worth a couple of hundred bucks in your pocket. They have become quite popular. I wish I still had all the ones I used to own.I feel like digging mine out of the shed now. I don’t think that the missus would be too happy about having it sitting around. Especially if I start my two finger touch typing again.
No idea in Australia. There are places in the U.K. and US that can service them, but I’d say the upper case being off might just be a quirk of the machine to live with. You could probably find a service manual online if you wanted to try and adjust it yourself.View attachment 1206543View attachment 1206544View attachment 1206545View attachment 1206546View attachment 1206547View attachment 1206548View attachment 1206549View attachment 1206550
I found mine in the shed. Olivetti Lettera 82 portable typewriter. It still works, didn’t take much to clean it up. The upper case lettering needs attention but where would you get it fixed these days?
View attachment 1206543View attachment 1206544View attachment 1206545View attachment 1206546View attachment 1206547View attachment 1206548View attachment 1206549View attachment 1206550
I found mine in the shed. Olivetti Lettera 82 portable typewriter. It still works, didn’t take much to clean it up. The upper case lettering needs attention but where would you get it fixed these days?