Typewriter letter about the county fair

I have been sending out letters on one of my latest typewriters: The Smith Corona Classic 12. What a delightful good time! Clickity-clack, stamp stamp, giggle giggle.

The few remaining typewriter repair shops have been seeing a resurgence of business.

Watch this lovely 8 minute documentary:

Just look at these beautiful eyes.

They've been gazing inside the depths of typewriters for decades. Bet there were a lot of dead spiders in there.

Most of my typewriters had pencil shavings in them. Not surprising. Imagine the author reading over what she wrote while at the same time sharpening a pencil hovering above the keys. I found blood once. Not sure if it was related to the sharpening of a pencil.... or murder.

Oh Angela.

The end of typewriters... c'est comme ça.

Letters to emails... typewriters to computers... dial-up to fiber networks... cable to streaming... Mika to Harry Styles...Sad, and yet... shoulder shrug. Can't change change. If you're still reading, here's one of the letters I wrote on the ol' typewriter:

Dear Reader,

Went to the fair. It is a whole different ballgame with a kid. You go through the poultry pavilion and show great enthusiasm while your kid holds her nose and says it stinks and let's get out of here FAST.

Then you go on a kiddy ride. She is very enthusiastic in line, then white with terror as we spin around on the pink dragon. At the games zone, every kid is a winner. What the kid wins is based on what you are willing to spend. Ten bucks won us a stuffed chipmunk holding a nut. We call her Nutella. She is a girl... so Miss Nut Ella.

Acquired all the usual food items: cotton candy, fudge, caramel apple. Then we were blessed with rain, which meant no tears on the way to the car. Winning parent moment thanks to the weather.

Christophe cannot fake boredom. He is incapable of more than FINE... FINE JUST FINE face, while I am over compensating over farm animals... LOOK AT THE BUNNIESSSSSS... AMAZING!!!!!!!

Any other day of the week I wage war against bunnies in my garden, but caged up I am willing to pretend to admire them.

Writing to you on a Smith Corona Classic 12. The platen is extra wide for addressing big envelopes I suppose. This one arrived after my mom went to an antique barn. It sticks here and there, but otherwise decent, like a well-worn clutch. I have yet to un-stickify the keys with spritzes of cleaning products and scrubs with old toothbrushes. Hardly a pro clean, but hey, neither is my house. You make do with what you have.

This machine comes with a QWERTZ keyboard instead of the usual QWERTY keyboard so there is always a mental leap when typing a Y or Z as thez... THEY switched places. Also includes some nifty accents and symbols so I am all set in any language... onlz... only a little trouble with English.

Back to the fair. When I was a kid, the fair was HUGE. A giant casino of bells, whistles, and fries. Now, I am amazed at how they put it together.

It's just a parking lot, and yet for a week each year it is the land of hopes and dreams.

An oasis of ribbons and prize money. It is the sun and moon and stars. A glimmering galaxy of goodies. How does it happen? I suppose with a mix of lighting, layout, and a herd of over enthusiastic mommies to keep the illusion alive.

Janice

Janice MacLeod

Janice MacLeod is a course creator who helps people write books and create online businesses out of their art. She is a New York Times best seller, and her book Paris Letters, is a memoir about how she became an artist in Paris selling illustrated letters. She has a vibrant Etsy shop and was one of the pioneering entrepreneurs featured on Etsy's Quit Your Day Job newsletter. She has been featured in Business Insider, Forbes, Canadian Living, Psychologies Today, Elle, Huff Post, and CBC.

https://janicemacleod.com/
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