At Medium, Mary Pilon profiles Paul Schweitzer of Gramercy Typewriter Co. — a father-and-son business in the Flatiron District of New York that will still repair your typewriter:
“Computers are being updated all the time,” he said, rolling his eyes at a PC laptop his son keeps in the corner. “Your computer becomes obsolete in a very short amount of time. It’s slow. It doesn’t have enough memory. A new model comes out. A printer won’t work with it anymore. That Underwood over there” — he points at a gleaming, black machine fit for James Joyce — “it’s 100 years old. What computer is going to last 100 years?”
Schweitzer was also the subject of this 2012 documentary short by Prospect Productions:
And if you can’t get enough of this stuff, I was reminded of this 2010 Wired article about the last generation of typewriter repairmen in California.
This is pretty sweet, too — about the typewriter repair dynasty of Highland Park, L.A.
Thanks, Sam. I’ll post that too! :-)
[…] to yesterday’s post on Gramercy Typewriter Co. in New York, here’s a short film about U.S. Office Machines, one […]