Ya puedes conseguir en sivasdescalzo el producto W J SP JB WVN PANT de la firma Jordan de la colección SU2023. ¡No dejes escapar esta oportunidad!
pls appreciate Bakugo going to the library to help Kirishima study
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Richard Polt's post (Shakespeare's typewriter) on his visit to Stratford-upon-Avon and his reference to an electronic wedge typewriter being immortalised in an oil painting (perhaps for the "first and last time"?) reminded me that I have had for some time a stack of these things sitting under cover in a corner of my lounge (wedges, that is, not oil paintings). This 1995 portrait of Jacquetta Hawkes of the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust, by Hazel Martindale, was photographed by Richard in Nash's House on Chapel Street in Stratford-upon-Avon (below). The inclusion of it on Richard's post drew many comments, most seeking to identify the electronic wedge typewriter on Hawkes' desk in the oil painting. The consensus seemed to be that it is an Olympia Compact (see below). The closet thing I think I have to it is this Olympia Reporter semi-portable electric typewriter: In this late 1970s image from the National Portrait Gallery in London, however, Hawkes can be seen with another kind of Olympic typewriter altogether, an eggshell blue SF portable: I usually make a point, when asked to "give a good home" to such machines, that I do not collect electronic typewriters - and I have been quite surprised by just how many times I have been asked to do that in the past few years. (Interestingly, most often would-be donors tell me the machines have hardly ever, if ever, been used.) I keep thinking that the time when these "crossover typewriters" become collectibles has not yet been reached - but maybe I'm wrong on that. I've notice that in recycling centres, op shops and second-hand stores, once a rich source for me of manual portable typewriters, electronic typewriters are appearing more frequently. But I also note they seem to stay on the shelves a lot longer. The majority of the electronic typewriters that have been "forced" upon me have subsequently been chucked out. I can't find anyone interested in taking them off my hands. Nonetheless I have kept a few, about a dozen in all. I admit to being curious about them as writing implements. During my career in journalism I never used one of these things - I went straight from a manual typewriter to an early NEC "laptop" in the mid-to-late 1980s. I simply skipped the electronic wedges era. So now I am mildly keen to try some out. This is the type of machine I used when I first moved from typewriters into the "electronic age". This one is a 5lb NEC UltraLite from 1989, considered the first "notebook style computer". The earlier model NECs I used did not have floppy disk or CD-Rom drives, from memory, but did have a 14-line lid-screen and a similiar keyboard. These are some electronic wedges, electric and/or platen typewriters that for the time being I have kept. But I won't be holding on to them for much longer. For obvious reasons, however, I will retain the Mario Bellini-designed Olivetti ET Personal 55: Nakajima AX-90 Triumph-Adler Gabriele 100 Sharp PA-3030 II Panasonic T370 Panasonic Thermawriter 12 Sharp PA-1000 Casio Casiowriter CW-16 Brother EP-22 Canon Typemate 10 Richard was kind enough in his Stratford post to link to a post of mine about the typewriters Hawkes' second husband, writer J.B.Priestley, used (anything, it would seem, than an Imperial Good Companion; it was a book by Priestley that gave the Good Companion its name): 1932 (Royal) 1933 (Royal) 1940 (Royal) 1958 (Royal) 1977 (Hermes 3000, 2nd design) Priestley and Hawkes on their wedding day in 1953 In 1977 Jacquetta Hawkes was born in Cambridge on August 5, 1910. She was an archaeologist and writer. Born Jessie Jacquetta Hopkins, the daughter of Nobel Prize-winning scientist Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins, she married first Christopher Hawkes, then an assistant keeper at the British Museum, in 1933. She is perhaps best known generally for her book A Land (1951). She died on March 18, 1996, aged 85. Below, some snaps from my own visit to Stratford-upon-Avon, about three years ago:
Ya puedes conseguir en sivasdescalzo el artículo M J JB SWEATER de la marca Jordan que forma parte de la temporada SU2023. ¡Date un capricho!