Platinum 70th anniversary (1989) in Calico celluloid:
Attachment 77320
(The green one was already at home).
Wonderful piston fillers...
Cheers,
BT
Printable View
Platinum 70th anniversary (1989) in Calico celluloid:
Attachment 77320
(The green one was already at home).
Wonderful piston fillers...
Cheers,
BT
This is the closest I’ve used to a soft vintage nib—it isn’t mushy, it has real give, and it actually seems designed to be used in an expressive manner. The flow has gotten better after a day too. The material is interesting…I wish it had more amber (as it did in the pictures) and more subtlety and nuance to it, but people have responded very positively to seeing it.
My latest, Omas Lucens 1930's
Latest? Well... I'm very far behind the curve! This great collab came my way a couple of weeks ago. It's a limited edition by mondo artist Joey Feldman in conjunction with Franklin-Christoph. Joey chose a model 66 Stabilis for the body, and they made up an acrylic in his fave orange/black combo. Those aren't scratches on the flat side of the barrel, but his signature, on pen #21/24.
I paired the pen with a previous Nagahara/FC "shadow" cursive italic. The enamel pin at the top is Joey's iconic "Plague Doctor", and the background art is the frontispiece to "The Frank Book" by artist Jim Woodring. Totally fun stuff! When I get a chance, I'll take some shots with other Joey art. He's a great pen lover, and while I may post a lot of vintage... SUPPORT YOUR LIVING ARTISTS!!
Hello,
Very nice, BT & Jon.
When it gets here, this is my latest 'Swan' to the bird sanctuary.
Attachment 78743Attachment 78744
Mabie Todd Swan No 1513 in Chased Black Hard Rubber. In Perfect Condition. Fitted with the original 14kt gold, full flex, wet noodle, Split feed medium tipped nib giving a wonderful writing style.
c1918
,... and arriving tomorrow, I bought a - Jinhao X159 Ivory White Acrylic Fountain Pen Gold Trim, Large #8 Fine Nib Office Pen, purely for learning how to write posh. I've never had/used a flexi nib, and I would be most upset if I damaged a 'collection' pen owing to pressing too hard. I would be annoyed if I damaged this pen, but not so much.
Carpio
I spent the weekend volunteering and shopping at the PNW Pen Show. It was amazing. I had the opportunity to spend a little bit of time with all the exhibitors and learn about their craft, and their own collections. I didn’t go too wild, just bought 3 pens, but one is a pen that I have wanted since I first saw it in the Jeweler’s display case- a Parker 75 Ciselé. I found a vermeil one and it’s so beautiful! I also bought a Brazilian 45 Insignia and a green toothbrush Duofold.
Good question, T. In a nutshell, that hasn't been an issue for me.
FC uses these 'square threads' (there must be an actual name for the cut) on their pens, some in the traditional place and a few models at the front of the section. These are really comfortable for those who don't care for feeling threads under their fingers. In practice, I've never had issues with ink collecting/drying in the threads, and I have probably 3 pens in this format. Certainly ease to dab out and wipe off with a damp something or other, but it doesn't seem - in use - to be any more of a bug than ink that creeps to the edge of a standard section.
And as for filling, well... I just got used to using syringes years ago, and it is the way I fell every time I can. Fill the converter, put it in the section, put a couple of drops on the underside to the nib to 'prime' it, and no ink wasted, none on my hands or pen, and one or two fills with water and the syringe is clean.
The other nice thing about these threads is they close with conviction, and open with less revolutions than standard-cut threads. I like them.
They’re ACME threads (no coyotes involved, thankfully). There is an ASTM specification, which these probably don’t meet; but that’s the generic term for that style (flat crest and root).Quote:
FC uses these 'square threads' (there must be an actual name for the cut)
These two I got yesterday from an Antique store near the in-laws for 12 each. I thought the gold-filled one was generic at first with a MT nib, but turns out it's an American made "Swan Pen" possibly from the early 1920s. The Parker 45 has the original converter, and a 14K Medium nib.
Already got them cleaned up and sac'd (converter has a PVC sac now as well).
https://i.imgur.com/M0Yq92H.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/CarP26f.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/kRNoSWL.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/PEvxl19.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/vuPCctC.jpg
Love the Mabie Todd, and good to see you back Karl.
Local Antique Store Find, the persian blue touchdown (again, this time the non-white dot model with a FT#5), and an Esterbrook 9668 nib.
Had it all disassembled, cleaned, polished up, and sac'd... til I realized, I only have the larger o-rings left... gonna have to wait til I can get some small o-rings 😕 (gonna be like 20 just to get some and shipping)
https://i.imgur.com/st1RcPZ.jpg
Found my little baggie of o-rings...
https://i.imgur.com/s3e8w5T.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/sDfywCn.jpg
Also found it with two original parker squeeze converters (the thicker originals) which I'll probably re-sac with PVC at a later time.
I got these two pens from ebay:
Conway Stewart 14 in blue and black pattern and matching 'Nippy' N.3 pencil in box
Black Sheaffer Snorkel Stateman White dot with box that I had to resac
Attachment 79141
Probably won't keep but got it on a whim to see if I could fix it up, and it's been a while since I saw a Moore pop up locally.
https://i.imgur.com/4nTHnZQ.jpg
Also another Blue Touchdown in more or less user-grade condition that was heavily coated in dried ink inside. Currently cleaned and disassembled (I don't normally knock the nib/feed out on these, but wanted to get the feed and grip into the USC with the amount of heavy ink was on it). Mainly grabbed it because the nib point was on the thicker side and I usually end up with EFs on this model.
https://i.imgur.com/JDdHmkn.jpg
Finally got a “mate” for my extra vest pocket. I think this one is earlier because it has no ink window and a patent under the “OMAS Extra” imprint. It’s still so charming even with the ambering.
Attachment 79266Attachment 79267
These were impulsive, they're not pens... but they relate to what I already have as companions of pens (now if I can just find the Wahl Pen that matches the Colonnade of the pencil...), saw the pattern and had to add it with my Wahl Gold-filled Pens and Pencils. So this is on the way.
https://i.imgur.com/gUuuC02.png
https://i.imgur.com/wIXLH0v.png
And this is what I found at the local Antique place for under $10 today (not shown are the modern ones in the same baggie), I like the red top Eversharps usually, these are blue leads though (though my favorite is the 'wet noodle' stock from legendary lead company). A bit of an impulse as I don't need em really, but I do have fineline pencils and Eversharp Gold-filled and Hard rubber pencils, and just one of these tins fully stocked goes for about that much.
https://i.imgur.com/VFKmfGz.jpg
So I guess today was impulse pen-companion day.