Yay, my phone got an update, and it seems to have cleared up my multiple picture uploading issues.
captivecookie wrote:
Yay, my phone got an update, and it seems to have cleared up my multiple picture uploading issues.
I had forgotten about Margin Release...
l-fox wrote:
I had forgotten about Margin Release...
She never stopped thinking about you, Larry (LOL).
Very nice (and in Black and White! -- more drama)
I think I should have "backspace" as my photo here on UHH
l-fox wrote:
I had forgotten about Margin Release...
Yup, it's a walk in the past, isn't it? Thanks for taking a look.
Steved3604 wrote:
Very nice (and in Black and White! -- more drama)
I think I should have "backspace" as my photo here on UHH
Go for it. I give you the right to use it for that purpose here on UHH.
Fabulous set, great perspective as always. Who knew that cobwebs could add so much to a composition.
joehel2 wrote:
Fabulous set, great perspective as always. Who knew that cobwebs could add so much to a composition.
Thanks, Joe. Your right about those cobwebs. There was a big spider egg sack inside, but no living spiders have been found yet.
These photos are all wonderful! (parts 1,2 and 3). The beauty is in the details. It just goes to show that, if we slow down and really see what we are looking at, art is everywhere.
Randy Bearden, a kid I knew more than 50 years ago, became a typewriter repair man when he graduated high school in 1972. And he was great at it; working on manuals. Wonder what he did when they went away. He worked for Fort Worth Typewriter.
I have been publishing a magazine since 1975 covers Quarter Horse racing.
Five years ago I was honored with induction into the American Quarter Horse Hall of Fame. When they asked for some stuff of mine to be included in a display about me and my career, I sent them that old black beast that I used
until I bought my first IBM Selectric. I guess if some kid sees that relic manual today he wonders what it is.
Thanks for these photos.
When I was in high school they had typing classes. The were elective courses; you did not have to take them.
this was 1960-1961. Mrs Jahn, the typing teacher, was really pretty. My buddy Ted and I took the class partly because of her . . . and we weren't bothered by the fact that we were the only boys in the class with 25 of so girls.
And I can still type pretty fast.
Interesting close-ups. Enjoyed.
captivecookie wrote:
Yay, my phone got an update, and it seems to have cleared up my multiple picture uploading issues.
Just absolutely excellent, Cookie!
Stan
trackmag wrote:
Randy Bearden, a kid I knew more than 50 years ago, became a typewriter repair man when he graduated high school in 1972. And he was great at it; working on manuals. Wonder what he did when they went away. He worked for Fort Worth Typewriter.
I have been publishing a magazine since 1975 covers Quarter Horse racing.
Five years ago I was honored with induction into the American Quarter Horse Hall of Fame. When they asked for some stuff of mine to be included in a display about me and my career, I sent them that old black beast that I used
until I bought my first IBM Selectric. I guess if some kid sees that relic manual today he wonders what it is.
Thanks for these photos.
When I was in high school they had typing classes. The were elective courses; you did not have to take them.
this was 1960-1961. Mrs Jahn, the typing teacher, was really pretty. My buddy Ted and I took the class partly because of her . . . and we weren't bothered by the fact that we were the only boys in the class with 25 of so girls.
And I can still type pretty fast.
Randy Bearden, a kid I knew more than 50 years ago... (
show quote)
Congratulations on a successful career. I am right with you on typing classes. Like everyone else who graduated from school and took plenty of classes, my two most useful classes overall were typing classes, one in summer school in high school and then another typing class in the Marine Corps a few years later. Typing is used by everyone everywhere. It is nice to NOT be among the, Hunt and Peck, typists around me.
Dennis
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