![]() Each sport identical designs with bold colour themes brighter hues on the first two, genuine wood and leather for Elwood, while the all-black Onyx is the modern equivalent of my grandma’s old 1933 Royal Model 10-S. There are four models: Artisan, Posh, Onyx, and Elwood (the model reviewed here). The keys are backlit, with LEDs centred under each key for uniform light across the board. This is one of the most handsome computer accessories we’ve ever used, featuring the kind of tactile, clicky mechanical keys we love. There’s a small brushed aluminium plaque bearing the model name coated in glossy lacquer paint, an impressive touch. Next, you'll feel how solid this keyboard is, weighing in at a hefty 1.5kg/3.5 pounds thanks to a polished alloy frame. Azio has done a great job of presenting the keyboard when you open it up – making the around-£200/$200 price tags seem justified even before you plug in the keyboard. The first thing you’ll notice is the packaging. The wired versions cost £189.99/US$189.99, with Bluetooth bringing that up to £219.99/$219.99 Vintage style ![]() There are four colour options, with wireless and wired models of each. The Retro Classic keyboard combines modern technology with vintage good looks in a new line of luxury keyboards that offer the same type of circular keys you expect old hacks to be bashing away on. When you type something or just hit a key command, it feels a lot more like you meant it that on your average keyboard. It's more than just the looks it's aping – this is a mechanical keyboard with a satisfying solidity to your keystrokes that give them weight – literally and metaphorically. This vintage-typewriter-style keyboard is the most beautifully designed we've ever seen – but is it usable?Ī traditional typewriter is a thing of ingenuity and beauty – and that's something the Azio Retro Classic keyboard keyboard wants to emulate.
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