Links:
(Willem Frederik Hermans) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Willem_Frederik_Hermans
Links:
(Bookstore Limerick) http://www.limerick.be/nld/collectie-schrijfmachines-wf-hermans/1210/een-nieuwe-eigenaar-voor-de-collectie-schrijfmachines-van-willem-frederik-hermans
Thanks for your letter! That really is a beautiful typeface. Do any readers know what it's called?
Readers who know how to make image maps are officially given license to scoff at my clumsy listing of the links that Mr. Boersma provided by e-mail.
Terrific letter and indeed a very nice typeface.
ReplyDeleteWhat a rich letter! And I hadn't known about the "Stasi" font.
ReplyDeleteVery nice letter. That typeface is really beautiful. I've never seen that on an Underwood. If I ever get to Europe I must visit the Limerick. Fantastic display of the collection.
ReplyDeleteI think I have a similar font in elite type on one of my 1956 Underwood 150 machines. It was once my mother's. I'd seen it before in pica version on a '54 model. Anyway, as for that story around a typewriter "The size of an office building," there actually existed such a machine--made by Underwood. It was about 15' tall and weighed in @ 16 tons. Those typebars weighed about 45 pounds apiece, so if anyone, child or adult, opened up the front cover and crawled into the type bar basket, the ending would be very similar to the one described in the letter. This machine was as big and heavy as a bulldozer!!
ReplyDeleteThe typeface can now safely be identified as Underwood Elite Victoria (UT56 in the 1957 Dreusicke Typeface Catalog, see The Typewriter Database/Library), thanks to an add in the Nassau Daily Review-Star (1951): http://fultonhistory.com/Newspapers%2023/Freeport%20NY%20Daily%20Review/Freeport%20NY%20Daily%20Review%201950%20Nov-Dec/Freeport%20NY%20Daily%20Review%201950%20Nov-Dec%20-%200091.pdf.
ReplyDeleteRegarding the giant Underwood, it must be noted that Hermans' fictional typewriter was larger still: each letter was "the size of a shop window", the platen had the size of the canopy of Amsterdam Central Station; the carriage had to be pulled back and forth by locomotives...