Jump to content

"will Write A Letter From Beginning To End With One Dip"


Bluey

Recommended Posts

  • Replies 6
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

  • Patrick L

    1

  • AAAndrew

    1

  • inkstainedruth

    1

  • Corona688

    1

That seems like quite a promise to make for a dip pen! I do love those old timey ads, though. Newspapers had more charm back then, didn't they?

 

Though, the "Camel" seems a misnomer - is it not dromedaries that have just one bump, whereas camels have two?

 

- P.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Dromedaries are camels. Bactrian camels (which are what you're thinking of) are the two humped ones. But they're both camels.

(Or, as a friend of mine who did her anthropology graduate level field work in Costa Rica said about llamas vs. alpacas -- "They're ruminants. They ALL spit....!" ;))

Ruth Morrisson aka inkstainedruth

"It's very nice, but frankly, when I signed that list for a P-51, what I had in mind was a fountain pen."

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I can get a good-sized paragraph from a Hunt 99 with a wire spring around it, if they contrived to hold more ink than that it could last a really, really long time.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

“Fountain” pens were dip pens with a built-in or attached reservoir. They produced a “fountain” of ink. What we call fountain pens today were originally just an extension of the reservoir pens, but they began to put the reservoir of ink in the body of the pen rather than on the nib. Feeding it from the body to the end of the nib was the trick. Waterman was one of the first to figure out a better way of doing it, but was far from the first.

 

They even had reservoirs for quills, usually a metal insert into the shaft of, one would presume, a fairly short-cut quill end.

 

The earliest shaft-reservoir fountain pens often just used steel dip pen nibs, with the fancier ones using gold. Now we’re coming back around full circle with the fad for putting dip pen nibs onto fountain pens for the flex.

 

“When the historians of education do equal and exact justice to all who have contributed toward educational progress, they will devote several pages to those revolutionists who invented steel pens and blackboards.” V.T. Thayer, 1928

Check out my Steel Pen Blog

"No one is exempt from talking nonsense; the mistake is to do it solemnly."

-Montaigne

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 4 months later...

From a compiled book of articles of 1901. Not sure why it's referred to as a fountain pen though.

 

j7CmQtr.jpg

Hi Bluey ,

Just a short message to tell you that you have a beautiful avatar ! Did you draw this picture ? Did you use fountain pen inks ?

Take care

Patrick

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Someone on this FPN planet is bound to own one of these pens, right?

(You catch my drift: do the test, share some pics!)

247254751_TSUKI-Yo_emptycompressedverkleind.gif.bfc6147ec85572db950933e0fa1b6100.gif

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Most Contributions

    1. amberleadavis
      amberleadavis
      43844
    2. PAKMAN
      PAKMAN
      33559
    3. Ghost Plane
      Ghost Plane
      28220
    4. inkstainedruth
      inkstainedruth
      26744
    5. jar
      jar
      26101
  • Upcoming Events

  • Blog Comments

    • Shanghai Knife Dude
      I have the Sailor Naginata and some fancy blade nibs coming after 2022 by a number of new workshop from China.  With all my respect, IMHO, they are all (bleep) in doing chinese characters.  Go use a bush, or at least a bush pen. 
    • A Smug Dill
      It is the reason why I'm so keen on the idea of a personal library — of pens, nibs, inks, paper products, etc. — and spent so much money, as well as time and effort, to “build” it for myself (because I can't simply remember everything, especially as I'm getting older fast) and my wife, so that we can “know”; and, instead of just disposing of what displeased us, or even just not good enough to be “given the time of day” against competition from >500 other pens and >500 other inks for our at
    • adamselene
      Agreed.  And I think it’s good to be aware of this early on and think about at the point of buying rather than rationalizing a purchase..
    • A Smug Dill
      Alas, one cannot know “good” without some idea of “bad” against which to contrast; and, as one of my former bosses (back when I was in my twenties) used to say, “on the scale of good to bad…”, it's a spectrum, not a dichotomy. Whereas subjectively acceptable (or tolerable) and unacceptable may well be a dichotomy to someone, and finding whether the threshold or cusp between them lies takes experiencing many degrees of less-than-ideal, especially if the decision is somehow influenced by factors o
    • adamselene
      I got my first real fountain pen on my 60th birthday and many hundreds of pens later I’ve often thought of what I should’ve known in the beginning. I have many pens, the majority of which have some objectionable feature. If they are too delicate, or can’t be posted, or they are too precious to face losing , still they are users, but only in very limited environments..  I have a big disliking for pens that have the cap jump into the air and fly off. I object to Pens that dry out, or leave blobs o
  • Chatbox

    You don't have permission to chat.
    Load More
  • Files






×
×
  • Create New...