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1943 Royal Quiet De Luxe

In August I was surprised by a heavy gift that was shipped to my doorstep: a typewriter! Specifically, a 1943 Royal Quiet De Luxe with a serial number of #A-1152926. Many thanks to the friend who sent it my way, it’s going to have a great home here.

1943 was obviously an inauspicious year. Two years into our formal participation in World War II, factories were shutting down the manufacture of their standard goods in favor of wartime supplies, and typewriter factories were included in this. The Royal factory switched over in 1943, which means my typewriter is one of those wartime typewriters, and some lucky owner was able to get it before operations shut down, as operations didn’t resume until 1946. Indeed, if you look at the Typewriter Database results for Royal Quiet De Luxe shows a clear gap in what collectors own.

A little Wikipedia reading informed me that this was the preferred typewriter of Ian Fleming (of James Bond fame) and Ernest Hemingway. I’m not surprised, it’s a real pleasure to type on. I don’t expect to be writing any James Bond novels, but it’s always nice to be in famous writer company.

The friend who gifted it to me cleaned it up and applied some oil so that certainly helps. It looks like the only thing I’ll have to take a look at is keeping the ribbon firmly in place (it looks like the ribbon spools were replaced at some point, and they fall out when I put it in the case and set it on its side) and the fact that the return lever has a tendency to scrape against the top if I’m not gentle enough. Some portables have a mechanism to extend the return lever, which I haven’t found yet, or I might just require some gentle bending back into a healthy position. We’ll see how the Magic Margins treat me on this machine, the ones on my Royal FP have managed to get stuck again (argh!).

So the other night I took it to the back yard, where all the photos were taken, and we had a little writing session together. Nothing fancy or interesting, just some words on paper to get things flowing. It was lovely.

And for those of you wondering what “Shift Freedom” means? From the 1948 edition of the Royal Quiet De Luxe manual:

“TO TYPE A CAPITAL LETTER, press either Shift Key
(19 or 21) and hold it down while you use the letter
key. Either Shift Key puts into effect Shift Freedom,
an original Royal feature which eliminates the noise
and eyestrain of a bobbing carriage by lowering the
type for capital letters instead of raising the carriage.
To type a number of capital letters consecutively,
press the Shift Lock Key (22). To return to lower
case or small letters, press either Shift Key.”

Some have said it’s a bit of a marketing gimmick, since many other manufacturers worked in a similar way, but it does make for an interesting conversation starter.