Shangas
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 6,116
- Location
- Melbourne, Australia
Today's pen is a 1925 Wahl Art Deco VP pen.
John in Covina said:The hard rubber pens start as some of the earliest pens and there are examples of mixed red & black pens from around 1905, The hard rubber gets used until the early 1930's. My pen books are buried right now but usually we find 1920's pens most. Flex nibs from Waterman are less rare as are Wahl Eversharp but more rare from Parker or Sheaffer. A nice ripple will almost look like some type of wood grain effect and are considered a bit of a rarety compared to the single color black or red.
Some of the single color pens will have a pattern embossed into the body and cap, this is called chased.
I have a 52 with a nice flex nib, but haven't found a ripple in my hunts yet.
I did get and then sold a Waterman Safety pen that was black hard rubber where the nib, feed and section sort of twisted up into place to be used.
John in Covina said:No fountain pen made before the disposible era is that. An Esterbrook is light because they used materials that were light. The Phileas is heavier because the plastic they use to mold the body and cap is fairly dense but it flows well so the casting have less boo-boos and are very accurate to the mold. Some low level pens used brass bodies and caps and they are heavy.
There are people that prefer light pens and some that prefer heavy, most early hard rubber and plastic pens then to be pretty light.
Even Esterbrooks as inexpensive as they were were still a lifetime purchase. Most problems that come up can be repaired so you only parted with a fountain pen when lost or stolen- mostly.
David Conwill said:John, I certainly didn't mean to offend. What I meant was that this was a mass-market pen, and the closest thing to a disposable in that timeframe. I think it's a great pen! And I see that the lightness has nothing to do with the original cost.
I've been using it all day, and have come to like it a lot. I think my first mistake, though, was loading it with Sheaffer Skrip ink. It's just so watery that it makes almost any pen scratchy. I have since re-filled with Private Reserve and I'm much happier.
-Dave
Miss Neecerie said:If you find you still don't quite like how it writes...a new nib might be in order..since they are interchangeable in Esties...opens a whole world of experimentation without buying another pen body.
http://www.esterbrook.net/nibs.shtml
has a list of nibs and their original uses...to give some idea of which you might like to hunt down on ebay...
David Conwill said:John, I certainly didn't mean to offend. What I meant was that this was a mass-market pen, and the closest thing to a disposable in that timeframe. I think it's a great pen! And I see that the lightness has nothing to do with the original cost. I've been using it all day, and have come to like it a lot. I think my first mistake, though, was loading it with Sheaffer Skrip ink. It's just so watery that it makes almost any pen scratchy. I have since re-filled with Private Reserve and I'm much happier.
-Dave