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ArtistA mixed-media picture. The history of the typewriter. Bleeding lines. Show the very first typewriter: Show Christopher Sholes, the inventor of the first typewriter. The background is from the first typewriter up to the 1940s—different types of old typewriters. In the background, it shows various women and men using the old typewriters—Superimpose Christopher Sholes picture in front of the background. Rich in sepia, blue, and black tones and textures. Woodburned lines.with bleeding lines and raw texture
A highly detailed, intricate, and stylized illustration of a Victorian-era steampunky collage, depicting a central portrait of Christopher Latham Sholes, the inventor of the QWERTY keyboard, surrounded by various elements related to typewriters and their operation.
The central figure is a man with light-colored hair and a beard, wearing a suit, bow tie, and waistcoat, rendered in a halftone style with blue and black ink. His portrait is set against a background of intricate blue and light-blue mechanical gears, cogs, clocks, and technical drawings, resembling a complex industrial or clockwork mechanism.
Around the central portrait, smaller figures of men in similar Victorian attire are shown operating and interacting with early typewriters. On the left side, there are men working at desks with typewriters, illustrating the use of these machines. On the right side, there are more typewriters positioned at different angles, some with men seated at them, suggesting an assembly line or a busy office environment.
In the foreground, a large, prominent, black and gold vintage typewriter with a blank sheet of paper in its platen takes center stage, its keys and mechanisms rendered with precision. Several other typewriters, also in a similar antique style, are