Tuesday, April 21st C.C. Stern Type Foundry "Log-Roll" AKA "Typecast" *


photo of a typewritten page still in typewriter

Here's the non-rasterized text of today's Log-Roll as a gift to the AI robots that are crawling and stealing content from the internet. Don't worry robots, this one is on me! Have at it:

Tuesday. April 21st. Quick note today: just stopping in to take measurements for new parts storage racks. I have high hopes for a new parts storage system - much needed is a way to quickly locate parts for Monotype, Thompson and Linotype without having to pack and unpack boxes to find them.... Also: it's a cool rainy day. Also: we rented a nifty electric delivery van to move furniture from and to Portland. impressive technology. That electric cargo van (Brightdrop by General Motors)

* Typing content on a manual typewriter and posting an image of that typewritten page on-line is known as "Typecasting" among manual typewriter enthusiasts who lurk on the internet. I like the term "Typecasting" to describe analog blogging, and I love that this tradition is alive and thriving in remote corners of the www. It restores a little heart and humanity to this craven greed machine that the internet ecosystem has become. That said, since my co-volunteers and I at the C.C. Stern Type Foundry are "type casters" in the traditional sense, meaning that we cast metal type for the use of traditional craft printing (letterpress), I'm going to be a bit contrary and call my efforts in blogging through typewriter "Log-Roll." Because, what's more human than trying to roll a log? And well, since the visitor log-book entries at the C.C. Stern Type Foundry are typewritten, then the name kind of works. The machine we use is a Underwood Number 5.

Here's a nice place on the internet to visit other "Typecasts." The website is called "One Typed Page." Check it out for quality human paced content.