Daily News

Those old-fashioned types

-

ALBUQUERQU­E – Typewriter enthusiast­s gather at an Albuquerqu­e restaurant to experiment with vintage Smith Coronas. Fans in Boston kneel in a city square and type stories about their lives during a proimmigra­tion demonstrat­ion.

A new documentar­y on typewriter­s featuring Tom Hanks and musician John Mayer is set for release this summer.

In the age of smartphone­s, social media and cyber hacking fears, vintage typewriter­s that once gathered dust in attics and basements are attracting a new generation of fans across the US.

From public “type-ins” at bars to street poets selling personalis­ed, typewritte­n poems on the spot, typewriter­s have emerged as popular items with aficionado­s hunting for them in thrift stores, online auction sites and antique shops.

Some buy antique Underwoods to add to a growing collection. Others search for a midcentury Royal Quiet De Luxe – like a model author Ernest Hemingway used – to work on that simmering novel. The rescued machines often need servicing, and fans are forced to seek out the few remaining typewriter repair shops.

“I haven’t seen business like this in years,” said John Lewis, a typewriter repairman who has operated out of his Albuquerqu­e shop for four decades. “There’s definitely a new interest, and it’s keeping me very busy.”

Renewed interest began around 10 years ago when small pockets of typewriter enthusiast­s came together online, said Richard Polt, a Xavier University philosophy professor and author of

The Typewriter Revolution: A Typist’s Companion for the 21st Century.

Since then, the base of fans has dramatical­ly grown, and various public events have been organised around the typewriter.

“It’s beyond the phase where this is just a fad,” Polt said.

It’s almost impossible to gauge recent typewriter sales.

Almost all of the original manufactur­ers are out of business or have been bought out and become different companies. The Moonachie, New Jersey-based Swintec appears to be one of the world’s last typewriter makers, selling translucen­t electronic machines largely to jails and prisons. But operators

of thrift stores and estate sales say typewriter­s are some of the quickest items to go.

“That’s part of the fun: the hunt,” said Joe van Cleave, an Albuquerqu­e resident who owns more than a dozen typewriter­s and runs a popular YouTube channel on restoring the machines. “Sometimes, with a little luck, you might find something from the 1920s in great condition.”

Doug Nichol, director of the upcoming documentar­y

said the interest stems from “digital burnout” and people wanting a connection to the past.

That interest seems to transcend age, he said.

“Kids who grew up knowing only cellphones and the computer are excited to see a letter typed with your own hand,” said Nichol, who owns 85 typewriter­s.

“It’s a one-on-one interactio­n that doesn’t get interrupte­d by Twitter alerts.”

In his film, set for release in August, Nichol interviews Hanks, who said he uses a typewriter almost every day to send memos and letters. “I hate getting e-mail thank-yous from folks,” Hanks says in the film.

“Now, if they take 70 seconds to type me out something on a piece of paper and send to me, well, I’ll keep California Typewriter, that forever. And I’ll just delete that e-mail.”

Hanks owns about 270 typewriter­s but often gives them away to people who show an interest. “No one is ever going to make the great typewriter ever, ever, ever again,” he said.

One way the typewriter craze is growing is through organised “type-ins” – meetups in public places where typewriter fans try different vintage machines.

Such events have been held in Phoenix, Philadelph­ia, Seattle, Los Angeles and Cincinnati.

During a recent type-in at Albuquerqu­e soul food restaurant Nexus Brewery, around three dozen fans took turns clicking the keys of an Italian-made 1964 Olivetti Lettera 32 and a 1947 Royal KMM, among others.

Rich Boucher, a slam poet, spent most of his time on a 1960s-era Hermes 3000 crafting poetry and pausing while trying to figure out when to return the carriage.

“I haven’t used a typewriter in forever,” Boucher said. “This is a real refreshing way to spend a summer afternoon.”

After finishing his work, Boucher sent a Facebook update about the experience. He then started looking online for a Hermes 3000.

“That’s the typewriter I want,” he said. “I’m going to find one.” – ANA-AP

 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? Andrea Kittle, of Albuquerqu­e, tries out a vintage Smith Corona electric typewriter at a ‘type-in’.
PICTURE: REUTERS Andrea Kittle, of Albuquerqu­e, tries out a vintage Smith Corona electric typewriter at a ‘type-in’.
 ??  ??
 ?? PICTURES: ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Joe van Cleave, who runs a popular YouTube channel on restoring typewriter­s, speaks about one of his vintage typewriter­s at his home in Albuquerqu­e.
PICTURES: ASSOCIATED PRESS Joe van Cleave, who runs a popular YouTube channel on restoring typewriter­s, speaks about one of his vintage typewriter­s at his home in Albuquerqu­e.
 ??  ?? John Lewis, a typewriter repairman, works at his shop in Albuquerqu­e in front of his collection of vintage typewriter­s. The typewriter is making a comeback with a new generation of fans gravitatin­g to machines that once gathered dust.
John Lewis, a typewriter repairman, works at his shop in Albuquerqu­e in front of his collection of vintage typewriter­s. The typewriter is making a comeback with a new generation of fans gravitatin­g to machines that once gathered dust.
 ??  ?? Joe van Cleave, left, and Rich Boucher, right, try out various vintage typewriter­s at a ‘type-in’.
Joe van Cleave, left, and Rich Boucher, right, try out various vintage typewriter­s at a ‘type-in’.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa