-40%

Olivetti Graphika Red and Black Nylon High Quality Typewriter Ribbon

$ 4.74

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Model: Olivetti Graphika
  • Condition: New
  • Type: Typewriter Supplies
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Brand: Olivetti
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • MPN: Does not apply

    Description

    This red & black nylon typewriter ribbon fits the Olivetti Graphika typewriter. It’s a brand-new ribbon that’s ½ inch wide. It has plastic ribbon spools that are 2 inches in diameter. The nylon ribbon is 12 yards long.  The center spindle is 6mm in diameter.  Treat yourself to a fresh new red & black nylon ribbon.
    IMPORTANT NOTE:  Some Olivetti older models may use a ribbon that is not 2" diameter spool - our customers buy this ribbon and "re-spool" this new 1/2" ribbon onto their existing spools by re-winding the ribbon.  To avoid disappointment, please make sure your typewriter uses a spool that is 2 inches in diameter. You can measure the diameter of your original spools or the diameter of the place where the spool fits to determine your typewriter's spool diameter.
    Olivetti Company History
    Olivetti was founded in 1908 in the small northern Italian town of Ivrea, near Turin not far from Milan. Camillo Olivetti had been much impressed on his various trips to the United States with the typewriter, already well established in U.S. offices but still largely unknown in his native Italy. Olivetti pulled together a modest capital fund of L 350,000 and, in Ivrea, Italy, opened his own typewriter manufacturing plant--the country's first--employing 20 workers. The Olivetti family took an active interest in the welfare of their workers. In the 1930s, they built schools, housing, roads and recreation facilities. They went on to become a very diverse company adding lines such as office furniture, adding machines, and teleprinters.
    Olivetti enjoyed unprecedented growth in the years following the war. The company expanded its export business to include the entire industrialized world. It also acquired Underwood, the U.S. typewriter manufacturer in 1959, and built new plants in southern Italy, Spain, Brazil, Argentina, Mexico, and the United States. It's growing collection of office products all exhibited the aesthetic sensitivity that had made Olivetti famous in the world of design, and Adriano Olivetti pursued his vision of an industrial giant responsive to the needs of both consumer and worker.
    The Olivetti typewriter has achieved lasting elegance in its machines with an unparalleled standard of stylishness in design, and at the same time a serious, unwavering level of technological quality. Put together, these ensured Olivetti typewriters were seldom matched by other brands. They are the most beautiful typewriters ever made.