POST IT
Washington
Post chairman Don Graham moves a typewriter in a room full of antique newsroom
and pressroom equipment at the Post last week. It looks suspiciously like an
Imperial to me. Surely not? There's a Linotype machine in the left back corner.
GETTING AWAY
The countdown
for my trip to the US – for Herman Price’s
Typewriter Collectors’ Gathering at
the Chestnut Typewriter Museum in
Fairmont, West Virginia, from October 11-13 - is now on in earnest. With a
little more than a week to go before I depart for Cincinnati, I will be devoting most of my time to making final
preparations for “le grand voyage”. So for the time being, at least, I will be
cutting back on posts on this blog, while I concentrate on other, more pressing
matters. I do have two or three
interesting typewriters about to arrive here, so I will post on those if I can
find the time to do so. In the meantime, please forgive me if posts are a
little less regular in the coming weeks. Normal service should (hopefully)
resume upon my return in late October.
SELLING TYPEWRITERS,
2013 STYLE
One of
the people I am keenly looking forward to meeting in the flesh in West Virginia
is Peter Weil. Peter contributes the always highly-readable Ephemera column to ETCetera
magazine each quarter, and has a growing and impressive collection of his own,
one which reflects his particular interest in the way typewriters were marketed
and sold at the turn of the last century. (In the upcoming September issue of ETCetera, his column is on the marketing
of the Sholes & Glidden). In the
past few weeks, Peter and I have been exchanging thoughts about various
business models relating to typewriters in the late 1890s, early 1900s.
In light
of this, it has been interesting for me to take a close look at present-day
business models for selling typewriters. A few categories are:
What is it?
THE CHANCERS: As the interest in typewriters
steadily grows worldwide, so too does that band of “entrepreneurs” who think
they can spot an opportunity to make money out of this mounting interest – sometimes at the expense of genuine typewriter
enthusiasts.
These
charlatans have got me very much on my guard these days. The category can be
characterised as the “I love typewriters, tell me all about them” model. It’s
generally a young person who initially gives the impression of having a great
deal of interest in typewriters, seeks advice on what and what not to buy, and
about cleaning up and fixing typewriters. Unfortunately, when this happens, I
can’t resist such enthusiasm, and throw myself into the task of helping out
with great gusto. It very soon proves costly. Happily for me, I have some excellent
friends in the Typosphere, ones with a sincere interest in typewriters, a
couple of whom have given me a word to the wise about such opportunists. I have
pretty quickly come to realise that the interest of these “chancers” (as the
Irish so aptly call them) is not in typewriters per se, but in acquiring them cheaply and selling them at a
considerably higher price. They are out to profit from the guidance and
assistance of real typewriters lovers. Be warned: the numbers are growing.
OK, so
this is the real world, the 21st century world. But many of these
mercenaries will read this, since they seek out blogs such as this while
mapping out their business plans. They also should be warned. They are becoming
more and more transparent as times goes by. If one of these chancers does read
this, and wonders to him or herself wherever he or she is one of them, take my
word for it – it the cap fits, wear it.
Tom Kern has this beauty for sale on eBay for $315
ANSWER TO OUR PRAYERS: When one keys in the word
“typewriter” in a Google search, the results may vary from day to day, but most
often a link to my.Typewriter.com will appear toward the top of the list (as will
non-selling sites, such as Paul Robert’s
Virtual Typewriter Museum and Wikipedia,
of course). On its site, Charles Gu's company claims, "Today, myTypewriter.com has become the largest source on the Internet for
American- and European-made classic typewriters, as well as related merchandise."
When people with a genuine interest in acquiring a typewriter, or typewriters, start their quest, they more likely than not will come across myTypewriter.com. And invariably they will be surprised to see the prices being asked for the typewriters there. They will also soon find that typewriters, often good ones, can be found elsewhere at much lower prices. This is all well and good, but people must also understand that a typewriter acquired from Charles Gu will be in, without exception, as close to pristine condition as it is possible to get. In other words, you pay for what you get, and you also pay for (at least in the short term) a bit of peace of mind. The machine will arrive looking just like the beautiful one you saw and bought online. I know this from personal experience.
When people with a genuine interest in acquiring a typewriter, or typewriters, start their quest, they more likely than not will come across myTypewriter.com. And invariably they will be surprised to see the prices being asked for the typewriters there. They will also soon find that typewriters, often good ones, can be found elsewhere at much lower prices. This is all well and good, but people must also understand that a typewriter acquired from Charles Gu will be in, without exception, as close to pristine condition as it is possible to get. In other words, you pay for what you get, and you also pay for (at least in the short term) a bit of peace of mind. The machine will arrive looking just like the beautiful one you saw and bought online. I know this from personal experience.
What you get for $650 on myTypewriter.com is what you see. Immaculate.
Unfortunately,
of course, many of the “chancers” described above will also see Charles Gu’s
site, and will allow themselves to think that they too can sell typewriters at
those prices. Big mistake. Unless they have put into a typewriter the type of
work Charles Gu’s company, or Tom Furrier or Bill Wahl have put in, can
guarantee the same service, have the same selling track record, they will be
putting high prices on their typewriters under false pretenses. Would-be buyers
must be aware of that.
$570 for this Blickensderfer 9 at the Vintage Typewriter Shoppe.
To
Charles Gu’s myTypewriter.com we could perhaps add in this category Dan Puls’
Mr Typewriter and Scott McNeill’s Vintage Typewriter Shoppe as among the
better-known, more frequently visited sites. One other seller I am aware of in the US is Tom Kern, who sells on
eBay. I must confess to being confused by a blog titled Vintage Typewriter Shop
(different spelling), on which there is this disclaimer: “In case you were
wondering, NO I am NOT a sister site or a friend of Vintage Typewriter Shoppe.
In fact, I think the owner is a wanker. Hence the making of this website – I am
not a wanker.”
Judging
by the Yahoo online typewriter forum, Scott McNeill does seem to have come in
for some criticism over the past few years – I know that Wim Van Rompuy in
Belgium was one very disgruntled customer, but that was some years ago now. At
least a couple of prominent Typospherians have advised caution, including one
who called VTS a “scam” and another who wrote these very wise words:
$695 at myTypewriter.com
$375 at VTS. $525 at myTypewriter.
“Typewriters are complex - and
now, ageing - pieces of machinery. Anyone can rub down an enamelled machine with
a little mineral oil to make it look good, but the skills to adjust and repair
a machine are good deal more rare. If I'm buying something that elaborate and fragile
over the Internet, I want an expert to go over it first.” He recommended “Tom
Furrier at Cambridge Typewriter, or Bill Wahl at Mesa Typewriter Exchange, or
the folks at Blue Moon Camera and Machine in Portland. All three have come
highly praised for their service from members of the Typosphere and I've read
stories about these guys (and other businesses) setting things right when
there's a problem, or even resurrecting old machines that seemed hopeless.”
Unlike this Typospherian, I
have had a lot of experience dealing with both Charles Gu and Scott McNeill (I
have exchanged emails with Dan Puls, but have never bought from him). Indeed, I think I would have spent close to
$40,000 between my.Typewriter.com and the Vintage Typewriter Shoppe. But all
that was a long time ago. I only ever had one problem with a VTS machine, and I
don’t think that was Scott’s fault, but the evil work of either USPS or
Australia Post. I do agree, however, that “after-sales service”, that is help
when things went wrong, was markedly absent. While I have not bought from Tom
Furrier or Bill Wahl, I can only say that my dealings with these two thorough
gentlemen has been most pleasant. I also say the same about Tom Kern, from
whom I have bought typewriters. In Germany, another reliable seller in this
category is Filipa Freitas (Typewriter Workshop), who sells on Etsy. In each
case the prices are high, but my experience has been that you do get what you
pay for.
From Charlie Foxtrot's website.
IN A STORE DOWN UNDER: Obviously
the major drawback for the real typewriter lovers in Australia is the cost of
shipping from the US or Europe. The only typewriter seller in this country who
we could in all honesty compare with the like of Tom Furrier or Bill Wahl is Derrick Brown in Brisbane. Derrick
sells on eBay under the name “carsstag” (he also has an interest in Triumph
Stag cars). Derrick qualifies as both a fairly regular typewriter seller and a
highly reliable one. He is hugely experienced in the typewriter industry, and
brings to the machines he sells not just that mechanical expertise but an
ability to make the typewriter look as good as is possible. As well, his
typewriters have always very well packaged and safe in transit. I have bought
many typewriters from Derrick in the past five years or so, and can vouch for the
service he provides. The downside, I suppose, is that Derrick is a one-off
seller – he doesn’t run an online store. When his typewriters do appear on eBay
they are usually snaffled up pretty quickly – as instanced by a Remington 5
listed yesterday with a starting price of $170 and sold by today at a “buy it
now” price of $285.
Derrick Brown's latest offering
Lately, another seller has
emerged online in Charlie Foxtrot.
This is a couple called Phillip and
Julie Chapman, who are based in the Southern Highlands in New South Wales
(around Bowral) and who also sell print type blocks, old cameras, telephones, China,
cufflinks and tiepins, and old suitcases. Apart from having an online store,
the Chapmans sell at markets such as the Old Bus Depot in Canberra and
Kirribilli and Rozelle in Sydney.
I do not know much about this
couple, so therefore am unaware if either of them have had, like Derrick Brown,
any past experience in the typewriter industry.
As sold on eBay from Fletcher, NSW, for $23.
The same machine priced at $135 by Charlie Foxtrot.
At their online store they
list a number of typewriters and confidently state: “All our typewriters are in full
working order and have been given a service, clean and re-lubed, as well
as fitting a new ribbon so that the typewriters we offer are ready to
start typing on. We can provide you with new ribbons in the future for the
typewriters we sell. They are generally $10 to $15 including postage. We can also offer technical support if
required. Unlike most 'support' services, this doesn't require us
to dial into your modem or talk to you using language that you can't
understand! You just need to call us and we will work through the issue with
you … We have actually had very few clients who have needed to call us and in
all cases we have sorted out the issue. To get a better understanding of the
workings of a particular brand of typewriter it is now possible to download
pretty well every type of manual from the internet.”
I didn’t
expect to see an acknowledgement to the like of Ted Munk, Richard Polt, Rob
Bowker or Alan Seaver for providing those manuals online, but then I guess
Typospherians put such things out there for the good of the general cause,
fully knowing they would be used as well as abused. The question of the
Chapmans’ “technical support”, however, does interest me, and I’m keen to find
out exactly what that entails. I am aware of the existence of most surviving
typewriter technicians in Australia, so I must assume it is one of them.
The
operation here is quite simple. The Chapmans buy typewriters online, mostly on
eBay in Australia and in Britain, and on-sell them at considerably higher prices.
As sold on eBay from Woodend, Victoria, for $157.50.
Resold by Charlie Foxtrot for $445.
An example is this green Blue Bird (Torpedo) portable. It was sold to Julie
Chapman on eBay by Steve Graham Auctioneer of Woodend, north of Melbourne, on
August 31 for $157.60. It was then almost immediately on-sold by the Chapmans
for $445. That’s a $287.50 mark-up, or 182 per cent. The question here, of
course, is what happened between the Blue Bird arriving in Bowral and then
being on-sold. Without knowing any better, one must only assume that sufficient
work to justify the $287.50 mark-up did occur.
In the
past six weeks or so, the Chapmans have bought at least 78 typewriters on eBay
alone (68 in one month alone, then I lost count), 49 of them in Britain (mostly
Imperials was my impression). So I guess Charlie Foxtrot’s stock of typewriters
is about the get a whole lot bigger. There have been some absolute bargain
buys, too, especially among the British purchases.
This Remington for example,
was an absolute steal at £3 (yes, that’s right £3, or $5!). I wonder what it
will sell for here, if it comes to Australia. Indeed, future offerings from
Charlie Foxtrot will be most fascinating. As of now, it is possible to buy a
Remington Quiet-Riter (one of the most common machines in this country) for a
princely $255, an Olivetti Lettera 22 for $185, a Silver-Seiko Imperial for
$165 (Silver-Seikos are very popular with the Chapmans), a Lemair (Brother) for
$165, a Sears Achiever (another Brother) for $145, an Olivetti Lettera 25 or 35
for $145 and an orange plastic Olympia Monica for $135. This last machine was
won on eBay for $23.35, so the price for the same item has suddenly gone up by $111.65.
Good luck
to Charlie Foxtrot if people are prepared to pay these amounts for manual
portable typewriters. And it appears that they are. But I wonder what long-term
effect this will have on the Australian typewriter market. I also wonder
whether more than $200 worth of work has gone into a typewriter to justify its price
shooting up from $157 to $445. If I was buying from the like of Charles Gu, I would be confident that that would be the case.
The Old Boat House markets in Brisbane.
VALUE FOR MONEY
There seemed to be a quite few stunned mullets (or maybe blind ones) about when I
posted on the sale of the Thurber Kaligraph for more than $40,000. When I was a
new features writer at The Canberra Times, about 10 years ago, I recall our
National Museum spending $180,000 of taxpayer's money on a football shield -
yes, that's a piece of wood with a few small tin cut-outs nailed to it. Nothing especially skillful in its design or production. No real significance to anyone, except perhaps one family (the Messengers). Where it sits in the overall picture of
Australian cultural, social, political, economic and sporting history is questionable, to
say the least. Yet it was bought for $180,000. At the same time, the museum
spent $30,000 of taxpayer's money on a boomerang purportedly signed by Tom
Willis on the Aboriginal cricket tour to England in 1867. Anyone could have told
the museum at a moment's notice that Wills didn't go on that tour. For one thing, he was too drunk to go.
Now, I won't try to make an impassioned argument in favour of Charles Thurber's place
in the history of the development of the typewriter, and especially not for the
Kaligraph in that development. Nonetheless, Thurber played a notable role in
19th century American typographical history. To mock the fact that someone spent
$40,000 to acquire this wonderful artefact is both narrow- and short-sighted. It surely has to be a far, far better investment in preserving a nation's history than spending $180,000 on a piece of wood with some bits of tin tacked to it. A piece of wood, by the way, that contributed zip and zero to Australian history.
TYPEWRITER
IMAGES
We hear a
lot about the liberal use of typewriters images. Someone once encouraged me to join
Pinterest. When I did, first I noticed the number of my typewriter images which
had been used there, uncredited, and then I realised there wasn’t a damned
thing I could do about it. Usually, the person using the image had taken it
from some other site, not mine. Where it originated had gotten well and truly
lost along the way. Attempts to rectify this just got ignored.
Last
week, while doing some research on robots and typewriters, I chanced upon an
image of a lovely old grey Royal portable set up with a USB connection. When I
clicked on it, to my astonishment an image of my own Corona Standard portable came
up as a link. And when I clicked on that – can you believe?! There it was
splashed, uncredited, across the top of the Goggle+ blog of one MG Siegler. My
kitchen benchtop was unmistakable. See image above.
MG: Where's your Corona Standard?
Now, who
is MG Siegler? MG Siegler is a general partner at Google Ventures (a venture capital investment arm of Google Inc) and a columnist for TechCrunch.
At Google Ventures, “he primarily focuses on seed and early-stage investments.
He has been deeply involved in the startup space since 2005, first as a web
developer, then as a writer, and most recently as an investor and advisor.
Before joining Google Ventures, MG was a founding partner of CrunchFund, an
early-stage investment fund. Prior to that, he reported on the startup world as
a writer for both TechCrunch and VentureBeat. MG still writes a weekly column
for TechCrunch on top of writing on his own sites and from time-to-time doing
movie reviews in haiku. Originally from Ohio, MG graduated from the University
of Michigan in Ann Arbor before moving out west to work in Hollywood. One day,
he will write that killer screenplay.”
Now, if a
guy like MG Siegler can go to my blog, grab one of my images of one of my
typewriters, and just throw it on top of his Google+ blog without so much as a
word to me about it, or a word of credit to me, anyone can. What chance do we
have? None! I guess that if you work for Google you feel you can just go and
grab whatever you like off the Internet. Let me add that Google is worth
zillions and I have 2/6 to my name. So if anyone was to sue me for copyright
infringement, they can expect to get a bit of my last 2/6. Such is life!
Fred McDarrah died in November 2007, aged 81.
Nonetheless,
I do thank Timothy McDarrah, son of Village
Voice and Jack Kerouac photographer, for his very polite and pleasant email
to me this week, and I do take on board what he said. Timothy noted, “As you
are a creative person, you surely understand the importance of protecting your
valuable, original work.” I have gently asked MG Siegler for recognition, but I
guess he’s too busy running Google Ventures to worry about little ol’ me.
GUILTY AS CHARGED
I felt
guilty this morning when I read a post from Ben Hoberman on WordPress.com about
the “Traffic Dos and Don’ts: A Checklist”:
Dos
Write regularly (check).
Write well (do try hard).
Keep your blog easy on the eyes
(don’t know).
Use your existing network (yep).
Create new networks (exceedingly
guilty of neglecting all friends in the Typosphere. Feel remorseful.).
Don’ts
Don’t forget to tag (don’t know
how).
Don’t spam (hate it).
Don’t be afraid of the Publish
button (rarely).
Don’t stop reading (try hard).
Don't lose sight of why you blog
(never).
I reached
a daily peak of 1939 page views the other day, and have totalled 688,335, so I
feel I must be doing something right.
LITTLE TYPEWRITERS –
AN EXTENSION OF OUR BEING
I was very interested in a comment Richard Polt made about
the Adler Tessy I posted on in August. He mentioned “little
typewriters” that produce typing that is well-aligned and clear. I really think
Richard put his thumb on it there, providing the criterion of what I am
eternally seeking as my “Holy Grail” typewriter. I am certain that is what I
like so much about the little grey Erika 9 I acquired from Filipa Freitas in
Berlin, or my “go-to” early Bijou (Erika) 4, or the little Underwood 4s and
Remettes I like to type with. I have since received a magnificent pre-war Erika
9 (Model M), which I will post on soon – but it’s not so “little”.
Higgins: 'Arm extension'.
Peter Weil offered another clue
to my typewriter philosophy when he and I were exchanging emails about the way
journalists felt towards their typewriters in the “old days”. Peter suggested
that, regardless of how we treated them, or took them for granted, we developed
an attachment to them. He was so right. I recalled how, when I interviewed the
great Irish snooker player Alex “Hurricane” Higgins in Sydney in 1970, the new world champion fussed about damage done to his cue in transit to Australia, how he bathed it
in melted butter to get it straight again, and how he talked about it being “an
extension of my arm, of my very being”.
Little may we have realised it at the time, but portable manual
typewriters were extensions to the being of journalists back then, too.
Lo and behold, the other day New
York filmmaker Patrick
Wang joined the Typosphere, saying “manual typewriters are new to me, but I
feel I have discovered a third arm, thoughtlessly neglected all this time. In
just a few months with my Olympia, I am certain my writing (and thinking) has
changed for the better.” Well said, Patrick, and welcome to the Typosphere!
SUNDRY ITEMS
A couple of Facebookers drew my attention to this wonderful Non Sequitur cartoon by Wiley Miller today:
. Someone in Portugal says he wants to sell this Taurus
typewriter. But then his email says “Courtesy of Mantelli collection”. Umm ....
. Another variation of the IMC Engadine has turned up. It’s a Valiant, owned in Amsterdam by a man who, having thought it was rare typewriter (but an awful typer) and having been told it wasn’t (rare, that is), is now going to put it on eBay. See here for my post on this machine.
. Another variation of the IMC Engadine has turned up. It’s a Valiant, owned in Amsterdam by a man who, having thought it was rare typewriter (but an awful typer) and having been told it wasn’t (rare, that is), is now going to put it on eBay. See here for my post on this machine.
. Likewise, yet another
variation of the Baby Alpina, Condor,
Rexina and Clipper – in fact, it’s almost identical to Mark Petersen’s Clipper.
This time it’s a Jaguar. So far that’s five different model names for the same
typewriter! More interestingly, no second versions yet of the Baby Alpina,
Condor, Rexina, Clipper or Jaguar. The Clipper and Jaguar differ slightly from
the others in that they have a flat ribbon spool cover, Nippo having overcome a
very serious design problem with the earlier machines in this line. They are
not all that unlike the Quality 003 Richard Polt came across in June,
especially in the carriage area.
. Someone in the US has listed
this Remington 10. Today the price dropped from $1200 to $875. I wonder why?
Note how the bright red paint just edges around the decals?
. You may already know about
C.D.Hermelin. I didn’t until a friend sent me a link. You can read “I am an
object of Internet ridicule, ask me anything” here.
. There was also a typewriter story, about New
Jersey company Swintec, in the Wall Street Journal in August. It was strangely
headed: “Death Keeps
Typewriters Alive, Clacking: Funeral
Homes a Key to Survival; Function Follows Forms.” Well, I’m glad something
keeps them alive. Email me if you want a copy of the story (it's behind a paywall).
. A correspondent with a
cork-platened Imperial Good Companion portable asked me how common cork platens
are (or were). I have a Canadian-made Royal portable with one, and I after
posting on it, a number of questions were asked about the platen. So maybe they
are not as common as I once thought. I am now assuming that demands for rubber
in the early part of World War II caused some typewriter companies to use cork.
But since thus seems to have been a short-lived move, maybe the companies found
cork either more expensive or not as effective as rubber. I didn’t find any
real difference with using the cork platen, except the platen didn’t show any
signs of use.
This IGC has a cork platen.
I have also heard of Imperial standards with cork platens.
. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if
you could do this with typewriters? ABC TV ran a lovely little news item the
other night about the four previous owners of a Morris Mini car getting
together with the present owner in Tasmania. All five went for a drive
together. What I loved was when the present owner said, “It has no radio, but you wouldn’t be able
to hear one over the noise of the engine, anyway.” (Too true!) “It has no
heater, but there are three ash trays!” I am very fond of Morris Minis – I’ve
owned four of them in my lifetime (including a Mini Moke), and never once
regretted buying one.
. Ettore Sottsass and the Olivetti Valentine just
won’t go away. His latest “appearance” was during the Taiwan Designers’ Week,
in a presentation called “Around – Ideas About Life”.
. In March, when I was visiting
my sister in Hervey Bay, Queensland, a large female kangaroo kept on eye on my
then “Typewriter Mobile”. She’s still hopping around my sister’s backyard, but
now has a joey in her pouch. I told my sister the joey should be called
“Urania” or “Piccola”. It was the then-mystery typewriter I was working on up there at the
time.
. I wish I had known about this image when I posted on robots and typewriters:
SUNDRY GRIPES
1. When one
messages an overseas eBay seller and asks, “Are you prepared to post to
Australia?”, I think it’s perfectly reasonable to expect a simple “yes” or “no”
in reply. But “It will cost a lot” is not the answer to the question I asked.
And, “Listen, you idiot, I didn’t ask how much it would cost, I asked if you’d
ship it” is such a rude thing to write back. So I don’t do it. Tempted, but no
…
2. You
have 1267 blog posts and on them there are possibly as many as 20,000 images.
Then someone writes “To Whom it May Concern” or to “the creator” and says he or
she wants, you know, that one “third down”. Almost instantly you realise they
haven’t even bothered to read the post. In fact, they’ve come across the image
in a Google image search. But they want you to go to the trouble of helping
them. Reader, help thine self, I always say (well, MG Siegler sets the Google
example, after all). Even when you do offer help, there’s often not a word of
thanks anyway.
3. “Hi. I have a … typewriter.” Yes. “It’s been
in the attic for 70 years.” Yes. “It belonged to my grandmother.” Yes. “It’s in
excellent condition.” Good. “And I’d like to know its value …” Stop! Stop right
there! Go no further. It was your grandmother’s? You’re selling it? As Men at
Work say in Down Under, “I don’t speak-a your language”. Sorry …
4. Sellers
who think anyone is taken in when they write in an eBay listing, “The top casing is missing but I
think this only adds to its character. Perfect for the collector or vintage
lover.” Like, yeah!?
5. Books in the public domain being offered for
sale online at ridiculous prices and with ridiculous covers such as these:
6. Dwayne Fuhlhage drew my attention to this massacre. The
seller’s excuse? “I couldn't get a bid on the entire machine so I sold the
keys! Very nice old Burroughs electric typewriter was working OK until I cut
the keys off this morning. It is now headed to the scrap pile unless you want
some or all of it for parts.” Sounds really proud of myself, doesn’t he?
eBRAY SALES
An empty typewriter ribbon tin reached $128. I never thought a tin would sell for that much.
In Sydney this Royal Junior fetched $134. Must have been the flowers someone painted on for good measure.
In the US a Salem Hall sold for $620.
This People's is for sale for $830.
In Australia this Royal QDL reached a staggering $352.
An in the US this Underwood fetched $363.
MISS SEPTEMBER
Putting an Underwood in the bath. Now why didn't I think of that?
8 comments:
Nice roundup of the news! We'll be looking forward to your reports of the big meeting in October. Take lots of pics! (:
Robert, your posts are exhaustive and exhausting - but I got there in the end, thanks. As a self-employed graphics type, I charge my time at £300 a day - that's on the basis that I may have gainful employment 100 days of the year. If I had to sell my new Graphika, serviced and in working condition - though not professionally ministered to - I'd have to sell it on at £400 plus if I was in the business. Maybe that's how the get rich quick merchants do it? my.typewriter was a great help when I started collecting in earnest, if only for the back stories. The prices of course are something else. The golden rule applies in all circumstances, caveat emptor.
Great post! I've bought one machine from mytypewriter.com and one from vintagetypewritershoppe.com. On both occasions, I got excellent service and equally excellent condition machines. I also got the chance to pick up a Royal Quiet DeLuxe from Gramercy Typewriter in NYC last June and I recommend them just as highly. Every inch of that machine was in stunning condition: putting on (what appears to me as) brand new rubber feet and they even went to the trouble of making sure the ribbon spools were metal.
Great full-of-news-and-views post.
I look at Ebay typewriters more often for laughs than to buy a machine.
These monthly updates are something to look forward to and definitely a fine way to get up to speed on everything typewriters!
How much I would like to chop all the fingers off that guy who chopped the keys off his Burrough's....
As always, an encyclopaedic and highly enjoyable essay.
Thank you for the time and expense you put into your writing, Robert. It's rare treasure.
Thanks for the welcome, Robert. I have a lot of catching up to do, but I don't stand a chance if you keep posting this much information!
I've always wondered about myTypewriter.com. Thanks for discussing it. Though the prices seem outrageous, there is much truth to the saying, you get what you pay for. I bought a Royal KMM typewriter from Los Altos Business Machines in Los Altos, California, and paid $250 for it. That's a lot more than I'd pay for nearly any typewriter on eBay. But, I got a great typewriter and life-time service on the machine. Once, when I brought it in for an adjustment, the owner noticed a missing part, which he replaced with one from a spare machine. I'd gladly by another typer from him.
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