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Aristokrat Fountain Pens, Germany: History


macquid

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Hi,

 

Can anybody give me some information about the ARISTOKRAT Pen Company from Fuerth (Furth), Germany?

 

I have a striped golden pearl celluloid ARISTOKRAT piston filler fountain pen. The detail and finish is very high quality, with a 2-tone 14K nib, striped visible ink reserve, inlaid gold metal Maltese cross insignia in the cap dome and elaborately engraved cap band repeating the Maltese cross theme.

 

So, I'd like to learn more about the firm that produced it. Google and documentary searches only turned up the info that the firm was in Fürth Germany and that they ceased operations in the 1960s.

 

Friendly regards,

MacQuid

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    • inkstainedruth
      Thanks for the info (I only used B&W film and learned to process that).   Boy -- the stuff I learn here!  Just continually astounded at the depth and breadth of knowledge in this community! Ruth Morrisson aka inkstainedruth 
    • Ceilidh
    • Ceilidh
      >Well, I knew people who were photography majors in college, and I'm pretty sure that at least some of them were doing photos in color,<   I'm sure they were, and my answer assumes that. It just wasn't likely to have been Kodachrome.  It would have been the films I referred to as "other color films." (Kodachrome is not a generic term for color film. It is a specific film that produces transparencies, or slides, by a process not used for any other film. There are other color trans
    • inkstainedruth
      @Ceilidh -- Well, I knew people who were photography majors in college, and I'm pretty sure that at least some of them were doing photos in color, not just B&W like I learned to process.  Whether they were doing the processing of the film themselves in one of the darkrooms, or sending their stuff out to be processed commercially?  That I don't actually know, but had always assumed that they were processing their own film. Ruth Morrisson aka inkstainedruth   ETA: And of course
    • jmccarty3
      Kodachrome 25 was the most accurate film for clinical photography and was used by dermatologists everywhere. I got magnificent results with a Nikon F2 and a MicroNikkor 60 mm lens, using a manually calibrated small flash on a bracket. I wish there were a filter called "Kodachrome 25 color balance" on my iPhone camera.
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