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== | == Introduction to Braillewriters == | ||
[[File:4968212338 b521bb844b c.jpg|thumb|Students at a school for the visually impaired in Tanzania working on their Braille Typewriters.]] | [[File:4968212338 b521bb844b c.jpg|thumb|Students at a school for the visually impaired in Tanzania working on their Braille Typewriters.]] | ||
A braillewriter is a machine used to write [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Braille braille].<ref>"Braillewriter". ''Merriam-Webster'', 2020. https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/braillewriter.</ref> The provenance of this technology cannot be fully understood without first introducing its origins in the development of braille and the early devices used for its writing. | |||
Louis Braille (1809-1852) is famously credited for his invention of braille, a universal system for reading and writing using raised dots for people who are blind or visually impaired.<ref>"Early Braille: The Slate and Stylus". ''Envisioning Technologies'', 2020. https://envisioningtechnologies.omeka.net/exhibits/show/the-emergence-of-the-braillewr/early-braille--the-slate-and-s.</ref> This system was one of several other forms of indented print at the time of its invention, including those developed by William Moon and others.<ref>Weygand, Zina. ''The Blind in French Society from the Middle Ages to the Century of Louis Braille,'' trans. Emily-Jane Cohen. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2009.</ref> The system soon became a global phenomenon, as it was very compatible with the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slate_and_stylus slate and stylus], an earlier form of a printing slate developed by inventor [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Barbier Charles Barbiere], and was widely used throughout Europe by 1905.<ref>"Early Braille: The Slate and Stylus". ''Envisioning Technologies'', 2020. https://envisioningtechnologies.omeka.net/exhibits/show/the-emergence-of-the-braillewr/early-braille--the-slate-and-s.</ref> | |||
== Digital Resources for the Study of Braillewriters: Manuals == | Braille would continue to influence the lives of people who were blind or visually impaired throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. One of the first mechanical devices that printed braille was known as the Hall braillewriter, developed by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Haven_Hall Frank Hall] in 1892. The original Hall braillewriter consisted of a rectangular cast iron frame, a keyboard resembling a piano with six black keys in total, and cast iron arches over the top of the machine and down to where the paper feeds through rolls.<ref>"The Hall Braillewriter, c.1892". ''Envisioning Technologies'', 2020. https://envisioningtechnologies.omeka.net/exhibits/show/the-emergence-of-the-braillewr/early-braille--the-slate-and-s.</ref> | ||
The Braillewriter would continue to evolve throughout the coming decades, with the most recent form of the braillewriter being the Perkins Brailler, still manufactured today. The Perkins Brailler originated in the United States and was developed by the Perkins School for the Blind in Massachusetts. After decades of development in the school's in-house printing house, the machine finally hit the market in 1951 and is still sold and used today in the United States, Canada, and beyond.<ref>"The Perkins Brailler: A "Premiere" Machine, 1941-1951". ''Envisioning Technologies'', 2020. https://envisioningtechnologies.omeka.net/exhibits/show/the-emergence-of-the-braillewr/early-braille--the-slate-and-s.</ref> | |||
== Digital Resources for the Study of Braillewriters: Instruction Manuals == | |||
=== Braillewriting Dot by Dot: In One Volume === | === Braillewriting Dot by Dot: In One Volume === | ||
== Digital Resources for the Study of Braillewriters: Museums == | [https://archive.org/details/braillewritingdo00elea/page/4/mode/2up Braillewriting Dot by Dot: In One Volume] is an instruction manual in the writing of braille using both [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slate_and_stylus slate and stylus] and briellewriters. It was written by researchers Eleanor Pester and Fred Otto and tangible materials designer Tom Poppe and published by the American Printing House for the Blind in 1995. The manual is targeted at teachers for students who are visually impaired and includes 10 lessons on the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perkins_Brailler Perkins Braillewriter]: | ||
Lesson 1: Introducing the uses of the braillewriter and the numbering of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Braille#Eight-dot_braille dot positions] on the braillewriter | |||
Lesson 2: Anatomy of the braillewriter and the loading and unloading of the braillewriter with paper and line spacing | |||
Lesson 3: Correct fingering on the braillewriter | |||
Lesson 4: Creating spacing between letters | |||
Lesson 5: Typing words and phrases | |||
Lesson 6: Correcting errors by backspacing and adding dots | |||
Lesson 7: Correcting errors by erasing dots | |||
Lesson 8: Creating spacing and columns | |||
Lesson 9: Typing numerals | |||
Lesson 10: Review | |||
=== The Perkins Brailler === | |||
The [https://brailler.perkins.org/pages/perkins-brailler#manuals manufacturer's website] for the Perkins Brailler allows viewers to download instruction manuals for their products in five different languages. | |||
The manuals contain 10 sections on the usage and repair of their classic braillewriter: | |||
Section 1: Unpacking the Braillewriter to prevent damage | |||
Section 2: Getting Started with information on who to contact if the braillewriter is damaged | |||
Section 3: Machine Layout and Basic Functions with instructions on how to use the components of the braillewriter, such as its keys, paper feed knobs, and paper rollers | |||
Section 4: Inserting and Removing Braille Paper | |||
Section 5: Inserting Paper | |||
Section 6: Removing Paper | |||
Section 7: Brailling Tips | |||
Section 8: Correcting Brailling Errors | |||
Section 9: Care and Storage with information on how to prevent damage to the braillewriter during usage | |||
Section 10: Returning the Brailler for Repair with packaging instructions for when the braillewriter needs to be returned | |||
== Digital Resources for the Study of Braillewriters: Virtual Museums == | |||
=== The Typewriter Museum === | === The Typewriter Museum === | ||
The [https://typewriter.slk.fi/about-us/ Typewriter Museum] is a private Finnish museum collection boasting over 150 calculators and 300 typewriters, which are divided into 102 total collections. All of their collections can be viewed virtually. | |||
The [https://typewriter.slk.fi/typewriter-collection/typewriters-for-blind/ Typewriters for the blind] collection features 10 braille typewriters originating from 6 different countries and manufactured between 1821 and 1989. Clicking into it produces a list of the braille typewriters currently on display in the Typewriter Museum. Each type of typewriter is accompanied by a description of its manufacturing company, country of origin, and dates of manufacturing, as well as a brief history, such as how the typewriter may have found its way to Finland or how its design has evolved if it is still being manufactured in the modern day. Images are included of each typewriter and some also contain details to how the typewriter is displayed in the museum. | |||
=== | === Museum of the American Printing House for the Blind === | ||
== Digital Resources for the Study of Braillewriters: | The [https://sites.aph.org/museum/about/mission/ Museum of the American Printing House for the Blind] provides both a featured collection and an online catalog of their mechanical braillewriters. | ||
==== Featured Collection ==== | |||
The [https://sites.aph.org/museum/collections/featured/mechanical-braille-writers/ Featured Collections] page in the [https://sites.aph.org/museum/collections/ Research and Collections] section allows virtual visitors to "View Our Collection of Mechanical Braille Writers." Clicking into the subpage produces an index of 35 mechanical [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Braille_embosser braillewriters for embossed characters]. Cataloging data is provided for each braillewriter, such as its manufacturing date, dimensions, and brief notes on the mechanisms it uses to emboss characters. Images of each braillewriter are also provided. | |||
==== Online Catalog ==== | |||
The [https://sites.aph.org/museum/collections/ Research and Collections] section also contains a hyperlink to the museum's [https://sites.aph.org/museum-virtual-exhibit/ online catalog], which allows viewers to access online exhibits. Braillewriters are featured under the "Writing: Braille Slates, Braillewriters, and Writing Guides" exhibit page. Clicking into this begins the exhibit tour, where visitors can either view the full individual records of artifacts by clicking "Next Record" or view and navigate through their entire catalog of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slate_and_stylus braille slates], braillewriters, and [https://www.rehabmart.com/category/writing_guides.htm writing guides] first by clicking on the "Table of Contents". Cataloging data accompanies each braillewriter, including manufacturing date and dimensions, as well as short descriptions on both the material components and history of the machine. These descriptions are more thorough than those provided in the [https://sites.aph.org/museum/collections/featured/mechanical-braille-writers/ Featured Collections] section. Images for each braillewriter are also provided and can be enlarged when clicked on. | |||
=== Envisioning Technologies === | |||
[https://envisioningtechnologies.omeka.net/ Envisioning Technologies] is an online exhibit on the "history of disability and technology in Canada." The site contains both exhibits on the evolution of braille technologies and collections of the technologies themselves. | |||
==== Exhibits ==== | |||
The "Emergence of Braille Technologies, 1860-1951" exhibit provides a comprehensive introduction into the history of braillewriters, from [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slate_and_stylus slate and stylus] to the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perkins_Brailler Perkins Brailler]. | |||
Images are provided in each exhibit that hyperlinks to the technology's catalog data, including which collection the technology is featured in, its manufacturing date, and so on. | |||
==== Collections ==== | |||
The "Canadian Science and Technology Museum, Collections, Library and Archives" collection features 4 braille writers manufactured between 1892 and 1962, as well as 2 instruction manuals on how to repair the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perkins_Brailler Perkins Brailler] at home, dated to 1989. | |||
The collection provides images for each artifact alongside catalog data, its manufacturing date, manufacturing or publishing company, and so on. | |||
Both the collections and exhibits can also be browsed by tag, where searching "braille writers" also generates a list of braillewriters from all of their exhibits and collections. | |||
== Digital Resources for the Study of Braillewriters: Manufacturer Websites and Online Stores == | |||
=== The Perkins Brailler === | === The Perkins Brailler === | ||
[[File:Perkins Brailler, Liverpool.jpg|thumb|Example of a 1951 design Perkins braille typewriter, once used by the Liverpool School for the Blind and now displayed at the Museum of Liverpool.]] | |||
The Perkins Brailler is a braillewriter still manufactured today with minimal changes to its original design.<ref>McGinnity, B.L., Seymour-Ford, J. and Andries, K.J. "Howe Press and the Perkins Brailler." ''Perkins History Museum, Perkins School for the Blind'', 2004. https://www.perkins.org/history/legacy/howe-press-perkins-brailler.</ref> The [https://brailler.perkins.org/pages/perkins-brailler#manuals manufacturer's website], also an online store, provides various digital resources into the study of the Perkins Brailler, such as its history, information on the products currently for sale, such as product features and specs, information on product care and repair, and instruction manuals available for download. | |||
==== Features and Specs ==== | |||
The Perkins Brailler website currently sells a number of products, such as the Perkins Brailler, electric Perkins Brailler, accessories, and spare parts. For each product, the website provides information about its features and specs. For the Perkins Brailler, this includes its keypad design, paper size, mechanical anatomy (e.g. metal carrying handle, round paper-feed knobs), and the size and spacing of the dots it produces. | |||
==== Product Care and Repair ==== | |||
The product care and repair section provided alongside each product description provides information on the long-term preservation of the product. For example, the description states that the braillewriter should be stored in a dry environment, as "humid or moist conditions can accelerate corrosion of the metal components."<ref>"Perkins Brailler." ''Perkins School for the Blind'', 2020. https://brailler.perkins.org/pages/perkins-brailler#manuals</ref> | |||
Images of the products listed for sale are also provided with their descriptions on the manufacturer's website for reference. | |||
== | == Notes == |
Latest revision as of 05:11, 11 December 2020
Introduction to Braillewriters
A braillewriter is a machine used to write braille.[1] The provenance of this technology cannot be fully understood without first introducing its origins in the development of braille and the early devices used for its writing.
Louis Braille (1809-1852) is famously credited for his invention of braille, a universal system for reading and writing using raised dots for people who are blind or visually impaired.[2] This system was one of several other forms of indented print at the time of its invention, including those developed by William Moon and others.[3] The system soon became a global phenomenon, as it was very compatible with the slate and stylus, an earlier form of a printing slate developed by inventor Charles Barbiere, and was widely used throughout Europe by 1905.[4]
Braille would continue to influence the lives of people who were blind or visually impaired throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. One of the first mechanical devices that printed braille was known as the Hall braillewriter, developed by Frank Hall in 1892. The original Hall braillewriter consisted of a rectangular cast iron frame, a keyboard resembling a piano with six black keys in total, and cast iron arches over the top of the machine and down to where the paper feeds through rolls.[5]
The Braillewriter would continue to evolve throughout the coming decades, with the most recent form of the braillewriter being the Perkins Brailler, still manufactured today. The Perkins Brailler originated in the United States and was developed by the Perkins School for the Blind in Massachusetts. After decades of development in the school's in-house printing house, the machine finally hit the market in 1951 and is still sold and used today in the United States, Canada, and beyond.[6]
Digital Resources for the Study of Braillewriters: Instruction Manuals
Braillewriting Dot by Dot: In One Volume
Braillewriting Dot by Dot: In One Volume is an instruction manual in the writing of braille using both slate and stylus and briellewriters. It was written by researchers Eleanor Pester and Fred Otto and tangible materials designer Tom Poppe and published by the American Printing House for the Blind in 1995. The manual is targeted at teachers for students who are visually impaired and includes 10 lessons on the Perkins Braillewriter:
Lesson 1: Introducing the uses of the braillewriter and the numbering of dot positions on the braillewriter
Lesson 2: Anatomy of the braillewriter and the loading and unloading of the braillewriter with paper and line spacing
Lesson 3: Correct fingering on the braillewriter
Lesson 4: Creating spacing between letters
Lesson 5: Typing words and phrases
Lesson 6: Correcting errors by backspacing and adding dots
Lesson 7: Correcting errors by erasing dots
Lesson 8: Creating spacing and columns
Lesson 9: Typing numerals
Lesson 10: Review
The Perkins Brailler
The manufacturer's website for the Perkins Brailler allows viewers to download instruction manuals for their products in five different languages.
The manuals contain 10 sections on the usage and repair of their classic braillewriter:
Section 1: Unpacking the Braillewriter to prevent damage
Section 2: Getting Started with information on who to contact if the braillewriter is damaged
Section 3: Machine Layout and Basic Functions with instructions on how to use the components of the braillewriter, such as its keys, paper feed knobs, and paper rollers
Section 4: Inserting and Removing Braille Paper
Section 5: Inserting Paper
Section 6: Removing Paper
Section 7: Brailling Tips
Section 8: Correcting Brailling Errors
Section 9: Care and Storage with information on how to prevent damage to the braillewriter during usage
Section 10: Returning the Brailler for Repair with packaging instructions for when the braillewriter needs to be returned
Digital Resources for the Study of Braillewriters: Virtual Museums
The Typewriter Museum
The Typewriter Museum is a private Finnish museum collection boasting over 150 calculators and 300 typewriters, which are divided into 102 total collections. All of their collections can be viewed virtually.
The Typewriters for the blind collection features 10 braille typewriters originating from 6 different countries and manufactured between 1821 and 1989. Clicking into it produces a list of the braille typewriters currently on display in the Typewriter Museum. Each type of typewriter is accompanied by a description of its manufacturing company, country of origin, and dates of manufacturing, as well as a brief history, such as how the typewriter may have found its way to Finland or how its design has evolved if it is still being manufactured in the modern day. Images are included of each typewriter and some also contain details to how the typewriter is displayed in the museum.
Museum of the American Printing House for the Blind
The Museum of the American Printing House for the Blind provides both a featured collection and an online catalog of their mechanical braillewriters.
Featured Collection
The Featured Collections page in the Research and Collections section allows virtual visitors to "View Our Collection of Mechanical Braille Writers." Clicking into the subpage produces an index of 35 mechanical braillewriters for embossed characters. Cataloging data is provided for each braillewriter, such as its manufacturing date, dimensions, and brief notes on the mechanisms it uses to emboss characters. Images of each braillewriter are also provided.
Online Catalog
The Research and Collections section also contains a hyperlink to the museum's online catalog, which allows viewers to access online exhibits. Braillewriters are featured under the "Writing: Braille Slates, Braillewriters, and Writing Guides" exhibit page. Clicking into this begins the exhibit tour, where visitors can either view the full individual records of artifacts by clicking "Next Record" or view and navigate through their entire catalog of braille slates, braillewriters, and writing guides first by clicking on the "Table of Contents". Cataloging data accompanies each braillewriter, including manufacturing date and dimensions, as well as short descriptions on both the material components and history of the machine. These descriptions are more thorough than those provided in the Featured Collections section. Images for each braillewriter are also provided and can be enlarged when clicked on.
Envisioning Technologies
Envisioning Technologies is an online exhibit on the "history of disability and technology in Canada." The site contains both exhibits on the evolution of braille technologies and collections of the technologies themselves.
Exhibits
The "Emergence of Braille Technologies, 1860-1951" exhibit provides a comprehensive introduction into the history of braillewriters, from slate and stylus to the Perkins Brailler.
Images are provided in each exhibit that hyperlinks to the technology's catalog data, including which collection the technology is featured in, its manufacturing date, and so on.
Collections
The "Canadian Science and Technology Museum, Collections, Library and Archives" collection features 4 braille writers manufactured between 1892 and 1962, as well as 2 instruction manuals on how to repair the Perkins Brailler at home, dated to 1989.
The collection provides images for each artifact alongside catalog data, its manufacturing date, manufacturing or publishing company, and so on.
Both the collections and exhibits can also be browsed by tag, where searching "braille writers" also generates a list of braillewriters from all of their exhibits and collections.
Digital Resources for the Study of Braillewriters: Manufacturer Websites and Online Stores
The Perkins Brailler
The Perkins Brailler is a braillewriter still manufactured today with minimal changes to its original design.[7] The manufacturer's website, also an online store, provides various digital resources into the study of the Perkins Brailler, such as its history, information on the products currently for sale, such as product features and specs, information on product care and repair, and instruction manuals available for download.
Features and Specs
The Perkins Brailler website currently sells a number of products, such as the Perkins Brailler, electric Perkins Brailler, accessories, and spare parts. For each product, the website provides information about its features and specs. For the Perkins Brailler, this includes its keypad design, paper size, mechanical anatomy (e.g. metal carrying handle, round paper-feed knobs), and the size and spacing of the dots it produces.
Product Care and Repair
The product care and repair section provided alongside each product description provides information on the long-term preservation of the product. For example, the description states that the braillewriter should be stored in a dry environment, as "humid or moist conditions can accelerate corrosion of the metal components."[8]
Images of the products listed for sale are also provided with their descriptions on the manufacturer's website for reference.
Notes
- ↑ "Braillewriter". Merriam-Webster, 2020. https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/braillewriter.
- ↑ "Early Braille: The Slate and Stylus". Envisioning Technologies, 2020. https://envisioningtechnologies.omeka.net/exhibits/show/the-emergence-of-the-braillewr/early-braille--the-slate-and-s.
- ↑ Weygand, Zina. The Blind in French Society from the Middle Ages to the Century of Louis Braille, trans. Emily-Jane Cohen. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2009.
- ↑ "Early Braille: The Slate and Stylus". Envisioning Technologies, 2020. https://envisioningtechnologies.omeka.net/exhibits/show/the-emergence-of-the-braillewr/early-braille--the-slate-and-s.
- ↑ "The Hall Braillewriter, c.1892". Envisioning Technologies, 2020. https://envisioningtechnologies.omeka.net/exhibits/show/the-emergence-of-the-braillewr/early-braille--the-slate-and-s.
- ↑ "The Perkins Brailler: A "Premiere" Machine, 1941-1951". Envisioning Technologies, 2020. https://envisioningtechnologies.omeka.net/exhibits/show/the-emergence-of-the-braillewr/early-braille--the-slate-and-s.
- ↑ McGinnity, B.L., Seymour-Ford, J. and Andries, K.J. "Howe Press and the Perkins Brailler." Perkins History Museum, Perkins School for the Blind, 2004. https://www.perkins.org/history/legacy/howe-press-perkins-brailler.
- ↑ "Perkins Brailler." Perkins School for the Blind, 2020. https://brailler.perkins.org/pages/perkins-brailler#manuals