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Did those power-buttons have any special tricks up their age-period enormous sleeves (or trouser legs) or was that just a marketing magic? Because they smell like the latter, which would actually make them hilariously great.
It's surprisingly nice looking machine despite of being a satanic witchcraft box (what's this electricity I hear everyone talking about these days? May the dear god help me!)
Don't forget to document the Empress' transformation! So pictures, lot's of them, please.
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Dear God. Bell-bottoms...
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Steady Shangas - don't flare up.
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tatte wrote:
Did those power-buttons have any special tricks up their age-period enormous sleeves (or trouser legs) or was that just a marketing magic?
I guess the term "power" is a bit strange now looking back, but I assume back then the fact that you could just touch a button to return the carriage to the left margin and turn the platen to the next line was pretty powerful.
beak wrote:
don't flare up
Good one.
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Hey everybody! It seems the entire winter has passed without my presence here. Due to a major victory, I've now returned. Yesterday in a single online auction I managed to acquire a Franklin, a Blickensderfer, a Smith Premier and a Canadian Scout. The last one I had never even heard of before. I lost out on a Hammond Multiplex because the %$#%!&* website froze up as I was attempting to snipe it.
I don't have them in my greedy little hands yet, but should get them on Sunday or Monday, after which I will post some pics.
Hope everyone's typingly well here...
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You paid dearly for them! I was following the auction, but at those prices it wasn't worth driving all the way to Kingston. Actually, the only machine I really wanted from that group was the Scout. Congratulations, hope you enjoy your haul!
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I picked up a Hermes 3000 the other day at a flee market, about 1958, for $15. (Don`t have a picture yet) The unique thing about it was the type size: not a pica nor elite, but smaller type still, about 14 characters per inch. Has someone seen such small type before, and what was it used for?
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I think I did pretty well pricewise on these, given their rarity. I might have gone a little high on the Blick, but I didn't have one, had been outbid before, and wanted to get it. The other three are pretty hard to get your hands on outside of specialist circles.
I finally got around to taking some pictures of them:
Canadian Scout and Blickensderfer 5:
Franklin 4:
Smith Premier #1:
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Interesting look at machines that don't turn up as often as others... Thanks for posting!
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My first Typewriter
Single owner, all the keys work, for 40 bucks.