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I feel you -- I've been thinking lately that I have too many typewriters to usefully use, and then this machine I gave away 2 years ago came back to me! Gah! If anyone lives in Maine and wants a typewriter . . . .
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How did it come back to you?
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The person gave it back. Didn't want it anymore. Can you believe that?
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JanetLand wrote:
The person gave it back. Didn't want it anymore. Can you believe that?
I suppose it depends on the typewriter. If someone game me a '60s Smith-Corona Corsair, I'd be sorely tempted to give it back too.
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beak wrote:
Let's face it, five machines would still be excessive in most (normal) people's eyes!
Two machines would probably have been excessive in most people's eyes where there was a viable industry. If the one needed service I imagine you could (1) have a tech come to you (2) have it picked up and taken to the shop and have them leave you a loaner. OK, maybe you don't like loaners, so you keep two...
Now sir, I have been an annoying typewriter tyro for all of six months hoping to graduate to journeyman, and already I have had your thought twice. I wonder how long you have been at it and how often you have had this recurring nightmare? I think I might be able to part with the custard yellow Sears branded bloated electric plastic bodied portable with the alignment problem. So it's not as if I am a fanatic, you know.
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No matter how hard I try, I just can't say no to a typewriter! If it's priced right, I'll walk home with it. I bought an SC enterprise once because I felt bad for it. When I see a typewriter just sitting there, I can't help but imagine it's injured and calling for help. Which isn't too hard considering a lot of them usually are. My heart's too big, and my wallet's to shallow, so I just end up emptying my clip of money on a typewriter that I really don't need nor want because I take pity on it...
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ztyper wrote:
No matter how hard I try, I just can't say no to a typewriter! If it's priced right, I'll walk home with it. I bought an SC enterprise once because I felt bad for it. When I see a typewriter just sitting there, I can't help but imagine it's injured and calling for help. Which isn't too hard considering a lot of them usually are. My heart's too big, and my wallet's to shallow, so I just end up emptying my clip of money on a typewriter that I really don't need nor want because I take pity on it...
Man, o, man, I couldn't have put it better myself.
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That ztyper's a funny kid. I know the feeling too!
I made a list of the machines I would feel I HAD to keep. It's 20 machines. I feel maybe I should just sell all the others and have those 20.
It would mean selling the SG1 though, in favour of the SG3.
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KatLondon wrote:
It would mean selling the SG1 though, in favour of the SG3.
Don't own an SG3 but do own an older battleship looking Adler Universal and a 1970's version which looks very much like the SG3. In that parallel case I would have to agree: I would keep the later one. Aside from looking like a battle tank of Ming the Merciless the older Adler accomplishes less with more weight, and damn broke itself in shipment as a corollary.
This means I have to find an SG-3 also. Oh drat you KatLondon, drat you!
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They are ineffably lovely. Mine's a really late one, 1978, and it just screams that clean 70s aesthetic at me - though I know the original concept was 60s. Mine has the red round logo. And although it's rusted throughout it works like a dream, except for the feed roller, which I DO have to send back to the Typewriterman! I'll do that this week, Tom.