2005 February archive | pinkfrog.net

Typewriters ahoy!

February 28th, 20050 Commentssupplies

06:42 pm - Typewriters ahoy!

I turned 25 recently, and was presented with a wonderful gift! It’s a circa 1930 Smith-Corona typewriter. It perfectly matches a model that was my great-grandmother’s that is script. I couldn’t be more pleased! No more worrying about electricity when create typewriter-based prints!

The machine was in perfect working order, except for a line that was broken on the advance wheel/spring. However, being the jeeniyus I am, I fixed it! The original line that was wrapped around the wheel appeared to be an old wax string. I used some of my bookmaking thread to replace the old string; hopefully it will stay. The wheel was actually filled with a spring, so it made it difficult to thread the string into the wheel. If it comes loose, it will be easy enough to replace, but I hope my knots will do the job and stay put.

While looking up information on my old typewriter, I stumbled upon this typewriter-keybaord conversion. Can you say awesome! The guy did it in a rather elegant manner as well; the machine is still in it’s original box. My only problem would be trying to look where the paper should be rather than the computer screen.

My Typewriter.com has a page with a model comparable to the two I own. . .for three-hundred smackers! (That’s restored to factory condition with a repro instruction booklet, of course.) Yowzah!

 

The DeGolyer Library

February 7th, 20050 Commentsreading, texas

Today was quite productive! As mentioned previously, I’ve been doing docent work for the DeGolyer House at the Dallas Arboretum. Valentine’s Day this year, the docents are having a meeting and it was requested of me to find some love letters between Everette and Nell DeGolyer. Peter Maxson directed me to the The DeGolyer Library at SMU in Dallas, Texas. Whotta day!

First off, I started rummaging through boxes of correspondence between Everette and Nell DeGolyer. The letters begin when both were nineteen years old, and continue until Everette’s untimely death. Of particular interest were the letters written between the young couple before marriage. Only once was my eyebrow raised; the majority of the correspondence was “passionately polite.” The sheer volume of correspondence, business agreements, diaries and other materials was un-BELIEVABLE! Fortunate for me, I was able to see the restricted rooms in the library. Most impressive was a room which I estimate to be approximately 15×15 with ten-foot ceilings. It was entirely filled with shelves containing sorted file boxes filled with papers; many of them belonging to Mr. and Mrs. DeGolyer. Don’t think I am exaggerating: when I say filled, I mean filled. Boxes, from ceiling to floor, wall to wall, with only space for a person to walk between the stacks. IN-credible. I can most accurately equate it to that scene in Raiders of the Lost Ark at the end where they pack the Ark away in a box in a warehouse. The space was smaller, but the voluminous amount of material is most comparable. That room only scraped the surface, by the way. I was most inspired by a card-catalogue created by Everett DeGolyer Jr., which was used in documenting his vast collection of railroad photographs. I will address THAT topic in a later post as my artistic inklings have been revved up again.

Lunch was with Russell Martin, the library’s director, and Ann Peterson, curator of photographs. Both were most gracious (they bought me lunch!) and highly informative. My time in the library was from ten in the morning to three in the afternoon - time I feel was well spent. Honestly I can’t wait to return to continue burrowing through boxes.

* * *

Plunging through so many documents today made me realize how ethereal electronic mediums truly are. I realize that yes, the amount of time spent archiving electronic documents consumes a deal of time and money; not to mention the longer “shelf-life” for electronic documents.

However, take a family starting out in the 21st century. A young couple courting e-mails and instant messages each other. It is incredibly easy to lost/delete all items documenting the beginnings of a relationship. The couple starts a family. Baby photos and videos are done digitally and are never printed out; correspondence between family members and new parents are just as easily lost. Business transactions, personal journals, music collections and so forth are purely digital. In effect, there is no “real” documentation of the family’s existence.

I pondered this upon finding numerous receipts and correspondence between businesses and the like in the DeGolyer files. A physical object helps to solidify a person’s existence in another’s mind. It is the difference between thinking “I love you” about another person and actually saying the words to their face. I wonder, how much more concrete was a relationship like Nell and Everette’s due to their massive amount of letter writing? I noted that in each telegram, note and letter that they always signed out with “Love”.

It has been my experience in email correspondence that there is a severe lack of formalities. Never once has anyone addressed me as “Dear Olivia”; much less thought of using capital letters. It really becomes more of an amorphous conversation in delayed time than a solid collection of thoughts and ideas. The biggest complaint of cyberspace communication I’ve heard is about the lack of communicating emotion. This irks me; people have been communicating emotions to each other for thousands of years through writing; what about writing in cyberspace has changed this? I suggest that it would be an effort to “keep up”. The sense of time when writing an email is rushed. Hurry hurry! Must get this to Bob in marketing ASAP! Cyberspace commands one to do it NOW.

Hmm. . .sounds like a paper in the works here. . .

 

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