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Spors, Et Al.


trdsf

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New arrivals in the house of trdsf! I've been wanting one of these for a while, and landed two in one lot: the middle two pens are Spors glass-nibbed FPs, one lever fill and the other my first crescent fill -- all the crescent needs is a new sac and a little polishing and it should be good as new. The brown snakeskin on the bottom is a Eberhard Faber Permapoint (with no cap, unfortunately) and the black pen on top is completely without identifying marks.

 

To which I can only say "Woot!"

 

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"Well, believe me, I calculated the odds of this succeeding versus the odds I was doing something incredibly stupid... and I went ahead anyway."

--Crow T. Robot, Mystery Science Theater 3000: The Movie

 

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Well, yeah, but the caps above it is a blue-gray striped Sheaffer with no pen. I'd love to find a matching cap for the Faber (or pen for the Sheaffer cap), they're both quite nice in-hand.

 

There were three other pens (and a mechanical pencil) in the lot as well -- two of those have no identifying marks either; one's a combination pen/pencil, the other I thought was an Estie, but it hasn't any identifying marks either. The third is a ubiquitious Wearever in bright red, with a weirdly small nib.

"Well, believe me, I calculated the odds of this succeeding versus the odds I was doing something incredibly stupid... and I went ahead anyway."

--Crow T. Robot, Mystery Science Theater 3000: The Movie

 

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One of the SPORS' nibs looks longer and thinner but I am curious as to what sort of line they write. Samples?

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The green crescent filler does appear to have a modern replacement glass nib; I've thoroughly cleaned it inside and out, replaced the sac, and polished it. It looks gorgeous... but it doesn't write very well. It's balky to start and prone to dumping great blops of ink. I may have the wrong ink for it; I don't know. I've got Pelikan Brilliant Black in it. I'm going to try the Hero blue-black next, and when it arrives, the J. Herbin Olive Green. I'm hoping it's just a matter of finding an ink with the right flow characteristics.

 

The other one is going to require a new J-bar and pocket clip before it can be considered restored; I'm going to put a new sac in it and fill it manually and see how it behaves. If that one puts down a nice line, then it might be an issue with the nib in the crescent. How to correct that outside of just replacing the nib, I don't know.

 

I do plan to have a word with the glassblower at the hotshop at the Conservatory near where I live... granted, nibcrafting is more lampwork than it is glassblowing, but he might have some suggestions, ideas, or just plain inspirations.

"Well, believe me, I calculated the odds of this succeeding versus the odds I was doing something incredibly stupid... and I went ahead anyway."

--Crow T. Robot, Mystery Science Theater 3000: The Movie

 

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    • stylographile
      Awesome! I'm in the process of preparing my bag for our pen meet this weekend and I literally have none of the items you mention!! I'll see if I can find one or two!
    • inkstainedruth
      @asota -- Yeah, I think I have a few rolls in my fridge that are probably 20-30 years old at this point (don't remember now if they are B&W or color film) and don't even really know where to get the film processed, once the drive through kiosks went away....  I just did a quick Google search and (in theory) there was a place the next town over from me -- but got a 404 error message when I tried to click on the link....  Ruth Morrisson aka inkstainedruth 
    • alkman
      There is still chemistry for processing regular chrome (positive) films like Kodak Ektachrome and Fuji Velvia, but Kodachrome was a completely different and multistep beast. 
    • Ceilidh
      Ah, but how to get it processed - that is the question. I believe that the last machine able to run K-14 (Kodachrome processing) ceased to operate some 15 or so years ago. Perhaps the film will be worth something as a curiosity in my estate sale when I die. 😺
    • Mercian
      Take a lot of photos!   If the film has deteriorated or 'gone off' in any way, you can use that as a 'feature' to take 'arty' pictures - whether of landmarks, or people, or whatever.
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