TUGboat, Volume 45 (2024), No. 1.

Book review: Shift Happens by Marcin Wichary

Marcin Wichary, Shift Happens, October 2023, 1216+160 pp., 2+1 vols., ISBN 9798985873900. https://shifthappens.site

display of Shift Happens by Wichary

The book Shift Happens by Marcin Wichary, mentioned in Barbara’s column in the last TUGboat,1 was published near the end of 2023. The book tells the story of keyboards from the earliest typewriters (ca. 1870) to the virtual keyboards made of pixels in our pockets today, in approximately 1200 pages and 1300 photographs (many taken by the author). Notwithstanding the profusion of photos, it is not a “coffee table” book; the text tells the story.

There is a wealth of information about the book and keyboards in general on its web site: a commentary on the text, essays on related topics, the run of the newsletter that the author published during the book’s production, and several keyboard games (e.g., “make your own dvorak hands”). The book is strikingly designed and typeset by the author. He also oversaw the final production process, visiting the printing plant (in Maine) in person, and has plenty of interesting things to say about the whole process. The Kickstarter campaign updates tell much of the story.2

Before publication, the Museum of Printing (MoP) hosted a panel with the author and other typographic luminaries. The discussion, more than an hour long, was recorded, and is posted on MoP’s YouTube channel in three parts.3

For those interested in the nuts and bolts of publication, Glenn Fleishman, the book’s editor and manager of print production, crowdfunding, and fulfillment, wrote a terrific essay about the funding campaign and how Kickstarter works on the back end: “How We Crowdfunded $750,000 for a Giant Book about Keyboard History”.4

Along with the book, Wichary worked with type designer Inga Plönnings to create Gorton Perfected No. 2, an OpenType font based on the design originating with the George Gorton Machine Company of Racine, Wisconsin, ca. 1900. The original has been pervasively used on engraved signs of all kinds, and later adapted to keycaps. A sample is shown below, and Marcin created a 96-page specimen booklet with many in situ examples.5

The book is completely sold out, but you can express interest in participating in another print run, in the event that one happens, on the web site.

Congratulations, Marcin!

Barbara Beeton, Karl Berry, Boris Veytsman

tug.org/books

Font sample for Gorton font

1tug.org/TUGboat/tb44-3/tb138beet.pdf

2kickstarter.com/projects/mwichary/shift-happens

3youtube.com/watch?v=HrlcFB_Q_UE
   youtube.com/watch?v=-8a4XwOtd9k
   youtube.com/watch?v=SWfDrcdXfaM

4glennf.medium.com/how-we-crowdfunded-750-000-for-a-giant-book-about-keyboard-history-c30e24c4022e

5shifthappens.site/gorton-perfected-specimen.pdf


$Date: 2024/03/26 21:21:55 $
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