loveallthingsitalian
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- Joined
- Mar 7, 2012
- Messages
- 15,055
Memories, memories! I learned to touch type on an old sit-up-and-beg Imperial typewriter to a record (yes, an actual 78rpm), Nellie The Elephant or something silly, with cardboard tied over the keys so we had to look at the book we were typing from. I did an advanced course in electric typing - an old Golfball typewriter - anyone remember them? They were the latest hi-tec stuff on the market at the time. When my children were still at a malleable age I made them sit in front of a keyboard and type from the screen. It lasted a whole summer holiday and they HATED it but now they all say it was the most useful skill anyone taught them for office work.
AH YES, THE Olivetti golf ball which spun around but it had a flaw, if you were too fast a typist it wasn't that accurate at times.
Remember the daisy wheels which you could change for different fonts - big change from a drop down box with a huge choice even though we only use one or two.
My dad used to do the church magazine by stencil and as kids we used to have to turn the handle of the old gestetner like things processed as he didn't own an electric version. It was a real art form to get the stencil typed, on the machine and inked.
And I remember when tipex was allowed (prior to that we were only allowed to use a rubber which again was an art form to correct through several carbon copies)
Haven't seen carbon paper for years, remember when reps came to office to sell it and boy was it the hard sell (DF eat your heart out) one even cried to get us girls to buy from him. It was expensive but you had to use it until there was nothing left if it!