(06-28-2016, 11:31 AM)Mickey Oberman Wrote: Freddy,
I have some fountain pens but never intentionally collected them.
I started when my first client, an old friend and a lawyer read my very first title search. He said, 'Mickey, this is perfect as it should be but look at my hands and French cuffs.' Little blue blobs all over.
That weekend I went pen hunting - fountain pen hunting. I found a little old antique shop that had about two dozen identical unused pens under a glass case. Five dollars and that beautiful little Parker Vacumatic was mine. We were together until two years after I retired. I was writing a letter and it hemorrhaged. I panicked as one may do when an old friend becomes ill.
I could not find a repair shop in Toronto nor, indeed, any pen shop so I started buying cheap pens from China. They were good pens and rather gaudy but not my Vacumatic.
Then I discovered a newly born pen shop in Toronto called Wonder Pens. It was started by a young couple, Liz and Jon Chan, working out of their apartment. Liz listened to my tale of woe and suggested what she thought would ideally meet my needs - a Lamy Safari. It was perfect. I still use it as my everyday pen.
It is a very unorthodox pen in configuration and versatility, considering its $32 price.
The Chan's have since expanded their location twice and their family by a baby and a kitten.
They have a large following of happy writers.
The Parker was eventually repaired by Danny Fudge of The Write Pen, an excellent pen doctor in Nebraska and it is still used daily at my desk.
I made a display rack for what had become a pen collection that included some old pens that I used when I did layouts for a newspaper and a couple of stick pens. But it is too small so is kept in a drawer.
By the way, I was so impressed by PhilNH5's beautiful pen that I spent several hours on the internet and placed an order for one. Impulse buying undoubtedly. That is unlike me but I could not resist.
Mickey
P.S.
I wish I still had the Waterman pen that was my "Today I am a fountain pen." pen. But that has vanished long ago.
Hi Mickey,
As I was reading your post, I feared that you wouldn't repair that Vacumatic. I am so glad that you did. I have one and it writes so smoothly. I have a lot of modern pens, including a Lamy Vista, which is the demonstrator (clear plastic) model of the Safari. Some I love, like my TWSBI models. They are just amazing. However, if I am going to be honest, the ones I hold dearest are my vintage pens. I have a couple of modern Conklin Crescent fillers but they simply do not hold a candle to my 1920s original Conklin Crescents when they were still made in their original home of Toledo, Ohio. They have gold flex nibs and are a treat to write with. I have one Mont Blanc Meisterstuck 146 that was given to me as a gift about 25 years ago and while it is a classic beauty, it is not one of my favorites and I rarely use it. Other vintage favorites that I do use are my Esterbrooks from the 1930s to the early 1950s. While not considered posh, they are fantastic workhorses and have a simple build. Even clutzy me has been able to make simple repairs on them such as replacing the sac and J-bar. Also, the concept of nib replacement on them is simple but ingeneous for its time. I also have one or two Sheaffer Snorkels and while fun (the gaget lover in me is fascinated with them) they really don't hold much ink. I could go on but you get the idea.
As for my "Today I am a Fountain Pen", I didn't get one and the photographer took a photo of me holding a bunch of cheap 10-cent ball point pens. Even at 13 years of age I knew I was getting ripped off.
When I was in high school (about 1962-1963), I bought my first one, a Parker 45 that I still have.
Mary Lou (
PhilNH5), how can you possibly think I'm an enabler?
That pen really is gorgeous. Of your daily writers, which one is your favorite? I switch among my TWSBIs quite a bit but also like to use my Esterbrooks.
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