JBR
Well-known Member
I unexpectedly began having short writings published around 1980. At that time, I mailed hardcopies (sometimes with color-transparency slide photos) to the editors. At that time and for a year or so, I was hand-scribbling my initial draft, then typewriting the next draft... X-ing out misspelled or poorly chosen words. But I soon followed that method with the tidier practice of using liquid white-out, and typing-over after that had dried enough.
Cash was tight for me then. I acquired my first typewriter for $10 at a thrift store ("charity shop" as my British friends call them). It was a Smith-Corona from the late 1930s, in very decent condition, just needing a bit of cleaning of the mechanism.
Then, from my maternal grandmother, I inherited another S-C model, this one made in the early 1950s. It had been one my grandfather used. I really appreciated it. This typewriter had a smoother, quieter action requiring less-sharp key strokes. It served me very well for five years or so. My corrections method still remained the same.
While working for a year in Vancouver in the late 80s, I modernized and bought a very affordable Olivetti electric that had options for different type-faces and a type-over mechanism (with white ink), which allowed for very neat word corrections. The model was the Olivetti Compact 60.
The Olivetti was a real pleasure to use. The action was extremely easy when compared with my previous typewriters.
Though a good machine, it no longer got very much use after I bought my first "tower" style computer, keyboard & monitor, a set-up then termed "a DOS machine" (and I've forgotten the brand, but it was affordable). That was in 1990, and I'd bought it because someone had contracted me for a sizable block of work that would involve several months and pay me very well. But since 1996, I've worked mainly on a laptop.
I'd be interested in what others might like to relate about your time with typewriters.
(No requirement to include pics.)
Cash was tight for me then. I acquired my first typewriter for $10 at a thrift store ("charity shop" as my British friends call them). It was a Smith-Corona from the late 1930s, in very decent condition, just needing a bit of cleaning of the mechanism.
Then, from my maternal grandmother, I inherited another S-C model, this one made in the early 1950s. It had been one my grandfather used. I really appreciated it. This typewriter had a smoother, quieter action requiring less-sharp key strokes. It served me very well for five years or so. My corrections method still remained the same.
While working for a year in Vancouver in the late 80s, I modernized and bought a very affordable Olivetti electric that had options for different type-faces and a type-over mechanism (with white ink), which allowed for very neat word corrections. The model was the Olivetti Compact 60.
The Olivetti was a real pleasure to use. The action was extremely easy when compared with my previous typewriters.
Though a good machine, it no longer got very much use after I bought my first "tower" style computer, keyboard & monitor, a set-up then termed "a DOS machine" (and I've forgotten the brand, but it was affordable). That was in 1990, and I'd bought it because someone had contracted me for a sizable block of work that would involve several months and pay me very well. But since 1996, I've worked mainly on a laptop.
I'd be interested in what others might like to relate about your time with typewriters.
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