Image courtesy of Core77
The Chromatic Typewriter is a conceptual art piece consisting of a modified late-1930s Underwood typewriter that types a spectrum of colors, rather than the letters of an alphabet.
Click here for more information on this amazing typewriter art.
Thursday, August 16, 2012
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Popular Posts
-
"Join us at the Pennsylvania Trolley Museum for a weekend of vintage communications! ... Typewriter enthusiasts are invited to display ...
-
-
I'm going to go ahead and get started gathering information, as it is never too early to do so. We are definitely going to have to set u...
-
I think we can find a few people to reply to this pos t, can't we? Drop a (typewritten) note to: Don Worthington c/o Rock Hill Herald P....
-
If you're going to be in the Tacoma, Washington area on May 1, grab a typewriter and stop by the main branch of the public library . Ano...
Blog Archive
-
▼
2012
(83)
-
▼
August
(12)
- Southern California Type-In, Sept 23
- Typewriters in the News
- I Never Tire of Reading a Typewriter Repairman Art...
- The Typewriter Survives
- Be (cooperatively) shocking!
- Power cut forces courts to pull out typewriters an...
- iTypewriter Gives Your iPad a Retro Feel
- The Chromatic Typewriter
- 10 of History’s Most Beautiful Typewriters?
- The International Correspondence Initiative
- Qwerty is a rainbow.
- Learn to Type the U.S. Navy Way
-
▼
August
(12)
3 comments:
How would the typeheads stay inked? I can't imagine this actually works. Regardless, it is a very cool piece of art.
The key word is "conceptional." They look like watercolor pads to me. I'm sure they wouldn't hold up under impact.
This is really awesome! It's great to see someone was able to make a work of art with a typewriter without simply dismantling it for it's parts.
Post a Comment