Lulu-in-Ny
A-List Customer
- Messages
- 433
- Location
- Clifton Park, New York
I just bought an Underwood No. 4. I know very little about it, but it does work. Can anybody out there fill in any gaps for me?
Well, eat your heart out. For years, my medical office has been "period" (since I practice in an antiquated way anyhow), and I have a Western Electric 202 telephone on my desk, all furniture is from the '30s, and the typewriter in the lab is a late '30s Royal manual. Although my assistant and receptionist both use electric typewriters, I still use the manual because it's the only machine that types on ALL the labels we use, no matter the paper or size. I got rid of three modern typewriters in succession because they could not handle the job. Have used the Royal for years now and not a problem.Mike in Seattle said:I've often thought it would be fun to have an office in an old 20's building and have all period equipment & staff - wooden file cabinets, candlestick phone, manual typewriter, secretary with a steno pad full of shorthand
"Extreme penuriousness"--I love it!LizzieMaine said:but my resistance to getting my hands inky took second place to my extreme penuriousness.
miss_elise said:here it is... it's a mid 60s one i think, made in the Netherlands
kittypackard said:There are few things as pleasurable as having, on an idle Sunday dusk, the sound of a high pitched metallic *PING* at the end of every sentence, the whirl of the slider back into place, and a mad, rhythmic chop chop chop crashing down onto the paper--reverberating off your apartment walls.