I’m an art
journaler. The word “art” is used
loosely. The word “journal” not far
behind. I found art journaling last
summer when I stumbled across a video, and I was hooked. The art part can be quite basic with craft
paint, rubber stamps and stencils. The
journal part can also be as simple as quotes, pithy statements or verses. I love it.
My supplies
started out quite simple. Stuff I had on
hand. Kayla’s art paints, Sharpies,
rubber stamps left from my teaching days.
Then it expanded and grew like topsy.
Now I have a craft corner (soon to take over the room), a die cut machine,
drawers of rubber stamps, bottles of paint, stencils, paper. And now a typewriter.
I blame
Jerry Minyard. A West Brook colleague
and Facebook friend, Jerry recently changed the cover photo for his
timeline. A wonderful quote by C.S.
Lewis. The quote was great, but the
presentation blew me away. It was typed,
in broken lines, on a sepia background with faint clouds. I loved it and decided, on the spot, that I
had to have a typewriter so I could recreate it. True, I could probably have done it some
other way, but my art journal guru, Julie Fei-Fen Balzer (whose blog comes
email every Friday and I read avidly) mentioned her five “must haves” for art
journaling and topping the list was a typewriter.
I went on a
hunt. It was harder than I expected.
There were no typewriters on Southeasttexas.com. Nothing in the Yellow Pages. None lying abandoned at WB. EBay beckoned. I did find a couple in my price range. The shipping was horrendous. Those things are heavy. But finally, I found a candidate. The pretty, and pretty dirty, little blue
Smith Corona Coronet – vintage undetermined – arrived yesterday. It desperately needs a ribbon. Amazon complied. It reposes on my kitchen counter for cleaning
and inspection.
Kayla
arrived for the weekend and was immediately fascinated by the typewriter. She had to try it out. She used up all the paper and was
downcast. I told her to go get a piece
out of the computer printer and she lit up like Christmas. “You mean I can use the same paper!” She typed and typed and typed some more. “I did pretty good without a backspace,” she
said. “But it has a backspace key,” I
said. “Yes, but it doesn’t correct,” she
replied. She’s used to the delete key
fixing all our booboos.
She typed
on. The pitiful ribbon continued to give
up faint letters. She called her friend
to let her hear the typing. Friend now wants
one too. “I’ll let you hear the ‘ding,’”
she bubbled to her friend.
Kayla has a
cell phone, an iPod, a Nook, a Nintendo DS.
But she is enthralled with an “old school” throwback to an earlier age.
Urban
Dictionary defines “old school”: “The
term old school is of English origin and dates back to at least the 19th
Century and is used to denote something that is considered to be out of date
with current trends/ideas and thinking.”
I don’t care
for the phrase. That’s my school we’re
talking about. I prefer to think of “old
school” as things my daddy used to say.
He would approve some activity I was planning by commenting, “At least
it will keep you from stealing hubcaps!”
I dropped
this pearl on Kayla one morning on the way to school. In all seriousness, she asked me, “Grammy,
what’s a hubcap?” We started looking for
a car with hubcaps and did not find a single one by the time we reached the
school.
There is a
generation gap, but an aging blue typewriter has bridged it.
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