@odd A spirit duplicator (ditto machine) or a mimeograph are next on my list of potential acquisitions. So far, all of my typewriters, save one, have stencil settings though.
@chrisaldrich When I said stencil I was probably wrong, thinking of a spirit duplicator. They were common in my elementary school days around 1976-1980. Ahh, the fumes!
@chrisaldrich @odd Do they still use spirit duplicators in schools? It seems like they would be so much cheaper to use than photocopiers for quizzes and such. And yes I remember the smell very well.
Chis, Iâm amazed you found purple ribbons at all.
@bradenslen Iâm sure someone somewhere does, but theyâve broadly disappeared for quality reasons. @odd Youâre close with the stencil portion. One used the typewriter stencil setting (the center âwhiteâ between the typical black/red ribbon selector) to create a stencil which was then put on the duplicator to make copiesâusually around 30-40 after which the copies became progressively lighter and less legible. It was the duplicator chemicals that had that distinctive smell, so associating stencils with it is very natural. The last time I used one was in the late 90âs to make a small print run zine on a machine I âborrowedâ time on at a church that no longer used theirs.
Purple wasnât a horrible stretch (FJA products has a variety of colors and combinations), but I think Iâm going to have to go full DIY to make the teal ribbon Iâd like to have. Ribbons unlimited offers un-inked ribbon in cotton, nylon, and silk that you can self-ink. Iâm thinking that refill stamp ink, potentially mixed with some glycerin to keep the ribbon from drying out too quickly may do the trick.