Alan Mays' photos with the keyword: typewriters
World Type Writer—Rapid, Durable, Practical, Simpl…
28 Sep 2020 |
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The World Type Writer logo from The Type-Writer's Exchange Billhead, Philadelphia, Pa., 1890 .
World Type Writer, $8.00
Rapid. Durable. Practical. Simple.
The Type-Writer's Exchange Billhead, Philadelphia,…
28 Sep 2020 |
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An 1890 billhead for the Type-Writer's Exchange, a used office equipment store in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
See also an enlargement of the World Type Writer logo that appears in the upper left-hand corner of the billhead.
The Type-Writer's Exchange .
Second-hand type-writers and office equipment bought, sold, or exchanged.
46 South Fourth Street 1212 Market Street, Philadelphia, Jan. 16/90.
Sold to E. W. Lapp, 1 letter press & stand, $4.00.
Terms cash.
Received payment. Typewriter Exchange per S. A. Smith.
Logo: World Type Writer, $8.00. Rapid. Durable. Practical. Simple.
Olympia Typewriter Postcard
02 Feb 2018 |
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An advertising postcard for a deluxe Olympia typewriter model, nicely accented with a dog figurine, pretty flowers, and a rattan window shade.
Printed on the back: "Olympia offers instrument precision and classical beauty to give you the most modern portable for many years of enjoyment and trouble-free service. The most advanced premium features are standard equipment (at no extra charge) on the Olympia model SM3 DeLuxe...."
Let Me Take the Liberty
17 May 2017 |
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"Let me take the Liberty to invite you to the Fifth Annual Ball of the Original Ulster Social Club, Incorporated, at Tammany Hall, 14th Street near Third Avenue, Wednesday evening, Jan. 23, '07. Music by Prof. D. J. Lent's Full Orchestra. Tickets, admit gent and ladies, incl. wardrobe, 50 cents. Two gold prizes will be drawn for. Martha. 815 . . . 1905, F. S. Backus"
Postcard addressed on the other side to Leon Closson, Whitehall, Wash. Co., New York, Box 554, and postmarked Brooklyn, N.Y., Jan. 16, 1907.
This 1907 invitation or advertisement was overprinted on a humorous postcard dated 1905. A quick search didn't turn up any information regarding the Ulster Social Club, but Wikipedia Commons has an image of Tammany Hall as it appeared in 1914.
Simplex Typewriters, Santa's Favorite, 1908
01 Dec 2015 |
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Simplex Typewriters, Santa's Favorite, 1908
Sample of work of Simplex No. 1, $1.00: This machine will delight any boy or girl and older folks find it useful.
Sample of work of Simplex No. 2½, $2.50: A neat little note size typewriter that will please Glays or Joe, or Mama for social correspondence.
Sample of work of Simplex No. 5, $5.00: It will write a letter like this on wide business paper like Father's.
Simplex Lithograph Co., New York.
See also the front of this die-cut Santa advertisement:
Santa's Favorite Simplex Typewriters, 1908
01 Dec 2015 |
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"Simplex Typewriters, $1.00, $2.50, $5.00. The most instructive and useful gift possible to give any child, boy or girl. Come at once to see them demonstrated at E. Schneider & Sons Co., 80 Bergenline Ave., Hudson Hill, N.J."
If you have any interest in the history of typewriters—or vintage ads, photos, and ephemera related to typewriters—then you may want to track down a copy of the recently published book, The Typewriter: A Graphic History of the Beloved Machine (Calgary, Alberta: Uppercase Publishing, 2015), by Janie Vangool (full disclosure: my name appears in a list of supporters at the back of the book just because I preordered a copy).
I don't believe that this Simplex Santa makes an appearance in The Typewriter , but there are photos of a couple of Simplex (Toy) Typewriters (one dated 1910), along with Christmas magazine advertisements, Valentine cards, letterheads, postcards (including a copy of this one , p. 123), manuals, instruction books, certificates, touch typing charts (a colorful example similar to this one appears on pp. 86-87), die cuts, ribbon tins, and other delights.
Here's the other side of this die-cut Santa advertisement:
Morris Type and Platen Cleaner for Typewriters
23 Feb 2015 |
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Printed on the back of this postcard: "For over twenty years there has been no change in the method of cleaning type and platens on typewriters, rubber stamps, duplicators, etc. Here at last is the most modern way, the easy way, the last word in efficient ways to clean type, recondition platens, and at the same time free sticky keys or gummed parts."
Giant Portable Underwood Typewriter (Detail)
26 Feb 2015 |
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For more information, see the full version of this real photo postcard:
Giant Portable Underwood Typewriter
26 Feb 2015 |
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A giant Underwood typewriter on a horse-drawn parade float, date and location unknown. Mouse over the image above to see a close-up view of the typewriter .
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Could this be the same giant Underwood typewriter that was displayed at the Panama-Pacific Exposition, which was held in San Francisco, California, in 1915 (see postcard below)?
A Giant Underwood Typewriter at the New York World…
22 Jan 2015 |
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"The 14-Ton Giant Underwood Master, operating daily at the New York World's Fair, 1939. Underwood Elliott Fisher Company. Underwood, Elliott-Fisher, Sundstrand, Speed the World's Business, One Park Avenue, New York."
As this linen postcard suggests, a huge Underwood typewriter attracted visitors at the New York World's Fair in 1939. For some amazing photographs of the oversized machine, see The Giant Underwood Master Typewriter , a posting on the History By Zim blog.
Underwood Elliott-Fisher (originally the Underwood Typewriter Company ) also displayed a giant typewriter at the Panama-Pacific Exposition in San Francisco in 1915 (see postcard image below).
Printed on the back of this postcard:
The Giant Underwood Master Typewriter
The Largest in the World
Operates daily at the Underwood Elliott Fisher Exhibit in the Business Systems and Insurance Building at the New York World's Fair.
This huge machine, weighing 14 tons, is 1,728 times larger than the regular Underwood Master. It required 3 years to build. Each typebar weighs 45 pounds and the carriage alone weighs 3,500 pounds. Letters are typed on "stationery" measuring 9 by 12 feet, and the ribbon in the machine is 100 feet long and five inches wide. Two box cars were required to transport the Giant to the World's Fair.
A Giant Underwood Typewriter at the Panama-Pacific…
22 Jan 2015 |
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The Underwood Typewriter Company operated an enormous typewriter that was designed to impress fair-goers at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition , which was "a world's fair held in San Francisco, in the United States, between February 20 and December 4 in 1915."
The company later exhibited another giant typewriter at the New York World's Fair in 1939 (see postcard image below).
Text from the front of this postcard:
The $100,000.00 Typewriter
An exact reproduction of "The Machine You Will Eventually [Buy]."
Westward ho! Over the Rockies we go! On our way to the Golden Gate, we will see deserts, prairies, cowboys, ranches, mountains, canyons, and the wonders of the West! The Orient, the Occident, the South Seas, the Arctic--all the world will be there. Meet us in the Palace of Liberal Arts, Court of the Universe, San Francisco.
An Underwood Typewriter
1,728 times larger than the Standard Underwood. Weight 14 tons - 28,000 lbs. Dimensions in action 21 feet wide by 15 feet high. Writing daily at the Underwood Exhibit, Palace of Liberal Arts, Panama-Pacific Exposition, San Francisco, California, 1915.
Remington Color-Key Touch Typing Chart, 1959
21 Nov 2014 |
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A colorful touch typing chart on heavy cardboard with an attached easel on back that allows you to place it upright on your desk while you learn to type with your new 1959 Remington portable typewriter.
Remington Color-Key Touch Typing Chart
Here is exactly the same type of keyboard chart found in typing classes in leading schools and colleges throughout the country.
Use this chart with the Touch Typing Instruction Booklet packed with your Remington Portable. This approved typing course is the fastest, easiest-to-lean of any because it relies on simple visual methods. You will actually be typing sentences after just a few hours of practice.
The Letters You Type Are a Scandalous Show!
22 Jan 2015 |
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A vinegar valentine postcard dating to the time when "typewriter" (rather than typist) was commonly used to refer to the person doing the typing as well as to the machine itself.
Typewriter
About grammar and spelling
Just nothing you know,
And the letters you type
Are a scandalous show!
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