Early History of Fountain Pens

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  • Опубликовано: 24 авг 2024
  • A brief history of writing instruments from the Victorian era onwards.
    I'm extremely passionate about antique writing equipment. If you want to know more - check out my blog at www.throughouth... - there's lots to see!
    Check out the antiques I've got for sale, at:
    www.ebay.com.a...

Комментарии • 88

  • @grahamparr4710
    @grahamparr4710 7 лет назад +38

    My school was still using dip pens in the 1950's. I was an ink monitor filling ink wells in the desks.

    • @parkerhowell7560
      @parkerhowell7560 4 года назад +6

      did you give the special lady of the class a little more than the rest?

    • @grahamparr4710
      @grahamparr4710 4 года назад +6

      Parker Howell ah, memories.

    • @stefanlaskowski6660
      @stefanlaskowski6660 3 года назад +2

      My elementary school in the 1960s was built around 1905, and the student desks still had shallow holes to hold the ink bottles (which of course were no longer used).

    • @warrenricardo5244
      @warrenricardo5244 3 года назад

      instablaster...

    • @Crazytesseract
      @Crazytesseract 2 года назад +1

      I still use some fountain pens like a dip pen (no cartridge fits).

  • @SpringNotes
    @SpringNotes 4 месяца назад

    Thank you for this bit of history on writing instruments.

  • @singlesideman
    @singlesideman 6 лет назад +7

    Even though I've been collecting and using for a darned long time and I know all of this, I can't tell you how much fun it is to take this little tour of (part of) your collection! Thanks a million! What a blast!

    • @shahancheong9792
      @shahancheong9792  6 лет назад +3

      I have a lot of antique and vintage writing equipment in my collection. What you see in this video is a small sample of it. One day I'll make more videos.

  • @Pentrove
    @Pentrove 3 года назад +2

    Great collection of vintage pens and thanks for sharing the history.

  • @Jesse-zj7pp
    @Jesse-zj7pp 13 дней назад

    This is a very interesting video. Thank you for sharing your knowledge. I'm glad that it showed up on my feed. I prefer this type of pen video far more than "pen reviews". I have only 1 fountain pen which I use daily. I don't collect fountain pens but I do enjoy collecting vintage/antique wtiting accessories. My passion is for the portable writing cases (without the slope) from the 1930s-1940s. I will check out your blog now.

  • @peterpuleo2904
    @peterpuleo2904 4 года назад +4

    Well presented and well photographed. I enjoy your enthusiasm. I have a few older fountain pens from 1940 - 1960 which may qualify as vintage, and the nibs, even though not flexible, all have some bounce or spring in performance that adds to the experience of writing.

  • @TheImaginaryCat
    @TheImaginaryCat 6 лет назад +10

    Really interesting video! So happy I stumbled upon this

  • @singlesideman
    @singlesideman 5 лет назад +3

    A couple of things - Waterman's came up with the clip cap, a clip riveted onto the cap, in 1905, which was an option that cost more money. That is the first attached clip that I am aware of. The accommodation clip was roughly from the same period, and was essentially an aftermarket option for those who wanted to add a clip to a pen that didn't already have a clip. Before that companies like Mabie Todd offered a pen sleeve add on which was essentially a holder for the pen with a clip on it. Also, the Wahl pen you have there was called the All Metal Pen because the metal (machine turned, engraved rolled gold, silver, sometimes gold over silver with cutaway designs, sometimes enameled) was not an overlay over hard rubber, but was the structure of the pen barrel itself, and this was a selling point for Wahl because the thinner barrel material allowed for a wider sac, which allowed for greater ink capacity.

  • @blu3982
    @blu3982 3 года назад +3

    Thank you a lot for sharing such an amazing and interesting part of history, very beautiful pieces in your collection btw, congratulations!

  • @ChrisSaenz13
    @ChrisSaenz13 3 года назад +3

    This is such a great video... I really enjoyed it!!!!

  • @aethanchannell9131
    @aethanchannell9131 2 месяца назад

    What is said in the beginning is incorrect: the first commercially successful fountain pen was invented in about 1873-1875, it was known as the “Ink pencil”, or the stylograph. It was invented by Duncan McKinnon and later improved upon by of Alonzo T. Cross, which turned out to be the very beginnings of the modern day Cross brand.

  • @Dobj319
    @Dobj319 3 месяца назад

    If you go to the Lincoln Museum in Springfield Illinois you can see Abraham Lincoln's dip pen on display. It was manufactured by "Parker" but not the Parker of "51" fame.

  • @manfredknie8998
    @manfredknie8998 2 месяца назад

    very very well done. manfred here from Vienna in Austria

  • @richardsimms251
    @richardsimms251 Год назад +1

    Great video

  • @abrusticrelics5808
    @abrusticrelics5808 4 года назад +2

    Great video. I too am obsessed with fountain pens.

    • @shahancheong9792
      @shahancheong9792  4 года назад +1

      Been into FPs since I was a kid. Will never stop loving them :)

  • @garybeckner2991
    @garybeckner2991 4 года назад +2

    Very interesting video, thank You! I am just getting into fountain pens.

  • @conradsmith9332
    @conradsmith9332 5 лет назад +1

    Awesome video! I'm super happy I have a few of these pens and I can confirm they are AWESOME! Realy nice video.

  • @jaya6738
    @jaya6738 6 лет назад +1

    Glad to see this! It is a good video for beginning collectors. Thanks so much for this. Your explanation is clear and simple.

  • @stefanlaskowski6660
    @stefanlaskowski6660 3 года назад +1

    This was fascinating. I thought fountain pens were older than that, maybe from around the mid-1850s. How interesting to learn that dip pens were the best thing they had to write with (excluding pencils), especially when so many of our ancestors wrote so prodigously: Journals, letters, books, all done with such a primitive and messy technology.
    I'm just now getting into fountain pens, but clearly I have a lot to learn.

    • @shahancheong9792
      @shahancheong9792  3 года назад

      People like to claim that FPs dated all the way back to the 1600s, but if it doesn't work like a FP, is it REALLY a fountain pen?? They really only started getting practical in the 1880s, 1890s.

  • @maryharper9321
    @maryharper9321 7 лет назад +4

    So happy I stumbled on to your video most interesting and as I'm a novice I will certainly be asking some questions ... thanks

    • @shahancheong9792
      @shahancheong9792  7 лет назад +1

      Ask whatever you want. Always happy to answer if I can.

  • @ladyflimflam
    @ladyflimflam Год назад

    You are missing a Sheaffer Balance. That was actually the origin of the tapered cigar shape you showed with the Parker.

    • @shahancheong9792
      @shahancheong9792  Год назад

      I did have one. Sadly, I lost it. I have another one now, though.

  • @deuxpomme9777
    @deuxpomme9777 3 года назад +2

    Good video this is such an interesting topic !!

  • @explorerextraordinaire5472
    @explorerextraordinaire5472 3 года назад

    dude your collection is#legit

  • @iliassakalak
    @iliassakalak 3 года назад

    Excellent video!! Thank you!!

  • @grahamparr3933
    @grahamparr3933 3 года назад +1

    What was the first pen for lower classes🤔

  • @fabricioazevedo2361
    @fabricioazevedo2361 2 года назад

    Questin: What are the small numbers in top of the feeds? They mean anything?

    • @shahancheong9792
      @shahancheong9792  2 года назад

      Nib-size numbers, so that the right feed goes with the right nib.

  • @neilpiper9889
    @neilpiper9889 6 лет назад +1

    Today when you buy a Pilot Metropolitan it has a squeeze sac filler and Hero of China make the 616 with a squeeze sac filler just like the old Parker pens. I agree all things are coming back

  • @garybeckner2991
    @garybeckner2991 4 года назад

    Looks like, a Pilot Varsity would be fairly easy to turn into a eyedropper fill fountain pen, even though they are meant to be a throw away pen.

  • @neilpiper9889
    @neilpiper9889 6 лет назад +3

    eye dropper pens are popular today. Most people just seal plastic fountain pens with silicone grease after filling them with ink using an eyedropper.

    • @shahancheong9792
      @shahancheong9792  6 лет назад

      Yep. I've done that with a few cheap pens. Rip out the guts, fill it with ink and seal it with grease. Works extremely well :)

  • @diegoscopia
    @diegoscopia 6 лет назад +1

    Just curious but what is the reason as to why all the caps have wholes in them? Was this a common thing?

    • @shahancheong9792
      @shahancheong9792  6 лет назад +2

      Air-pressure.
      The pens when capped, had to be air-tight (or as near to airtight as possible) to prevent the pen from drying out. But when you uncapped the pen, the vacuum caused by the pen leaving the cap and the air rushing in, could create a suction effect which would suck ink out of the pen.
      The holes drilled into the pen-caps was to provide airflow, to stop this from happening.

  • @SevenDeMagnus
    @SevenDeMagnus 5 лет назад +4

    Cool Thanks. I like the old lever or eye dropper hard rubber pens, they have the ugly but interestingly cool cigar look, like the crescent filler. What's your favorite?
    Thank you. God bless, Proverbs 31

  • @stansmith4054
    @stansmith4054 5 лет назад +1

    Shahan, what do you think of vintage Esterbrook FPs? I purchased a locked box that was certified sealed in 1955. In the box I found a Esterbrook lever fill J series FP. Now keep in mind it hasn't seen the light of day since 1955. So I tried it on paper to see how smooth the nib was. Ink came out! I used the pen for 3 days until the ink finally ran out. I have seen many things in life especially in the military but that pen with working ink from 1955 surprized the heck out of me. Is this common in your experience? Thank you.

    • @shahancheong9792
      @shahancheong9792  5 лет назад

      FP ink is water-based. That it would last 60-odd years in a pen without drying out, the pen would have to be sealed in plastic. I don't see how that works...

    • @stansmith4054
      @stansmith4054 5 лет назад

      @@shahancheong9792 It was sealed in an air tight metal box. The pen was wrapped in wax paper. It is a true story. Thank you for the quick response. I am starting my FP collection too. It is seeming to be an addictive hobby. It is a healthier addictive hobby than my smoking hobby though! Thanks for your time.

    • @stansmith4054
      @stansmith4054 5 лет назад

      Maybe it is a sign from the fountain pen gods.

  • @yeska7192
    @yeska7192 4 года назад

    hey, by chance do you know how to disassemble a Doric nib and feed with an ink shut off valve? PLease please tell me if you know and please please dont tell me dont do it like everyone else

  • @peterfordyce7003
    @peterfordyce7003 7 лет назад +1

    Great video. That 1920s rolled gold pen was cool. Do you have any tips for replacing the ink sac of a c1960s Conway-stewart lever-fill, I can't seem to remove the barrel to actually get at the ink sac!

    • @shahancheong9792
      @shahancheong9792  7 лет назад +1

      The vast majority of lever-filler pens have parts which are just friction-fit.
      The nib slides on top of the feed, the nib and feed slide into the section, the section slides into the barrel.
      Granted, they are extremely tight fits. To remove the section from the barrel, grip the section and barrel in opposing fingers and *GENTLY* rock back and forth with slight twisting motion. The section will slowly walk itself out, milimeter by milimeter. Then once you've got enough of it out, you can pull or twist it out *CAREFULLY* to get into the barrel.
      Provided the pen hasn't been glued shut (which shouldn't be done ANYWAY!!), this is all you should have to do.
      If it's proving stubborn, you can HEAT the section using HOT WATER *(no dry heat, and ABSOLUTELY no naked flames!!)*, and this may help to loosen things up a bit. But whatever you do, don't RUSH it. These are very old pens, and they need patience to be repaired properly.

    • @peterfordyce7003
      @peterfordyce7003 7 лет назад

      Thanks for the reply :) I do wonder if the pen if the pen is celluloid and would burst into flames if it got near an naked flame! Obviously I don't want to find out!

    • @shahancheong9792
      @shahancheong9792  7 лет назад +1

      Most likely yes, celluloid. And I have set a pen on fire once (it was broken, don't worry) to see what would happen. It wasn't pretty.

    • @peterfordyce7003
      @peterfordyce7003 7 лет назад

      I can imagine! By the way, thanks for this video and your blog posts about fountain pens. Because of them I now use a Parker fountain pen for writing notes during lectures. (The Conway-stewart was a fairly recent impulse buy)

    • @shahancheong9792
      @shahancheong9792  7 лет назад +1

      Impulse buys can be the best buys :)

  • @SamiyuruSenarathna
    @SamiyuruSenarathna 6 лет назад +1

    What are considered to be top fountain pen brands?

    • @shahancheong9792
      @shahancheong9792  6 лет назад +1

      That's very difficult to answer.
      Modern brands include Visconti, Parker, Waterman, Pilot, Montblanc, etc. Most younger folks like Lamy, although I've never actually tried it. I tend to stick to classics and vintage pens.

    • @SamiyuruSenarathna
      @SamiyuruSenarathna 6 лет назад

      Thanks for the answer. I am looking to buy a nice fountain pen. But I am worried about leaking the it in the flights.

    • @diegoscopia
      @diegoscopia 6 лет назад

      If you take good care its really unlikely the fountain pen will leak on the flight.

    • @SamiyuruSenarathna
      @SamiyuruSenarathna 6 лет назад +1

      Good care means?

    • @onatorrent
      @onatorrent 6 лет назад

      @Samiyuru
      Make sure your fountain pen is not completely full of Ink. If it is make sure to remove 1/4 to 1/2 the ink so when the pressure changes in your flight there is room for the ink to expand and then there will be enough room in the ink sac or ink chamber and it will not leak out. This is much easier to do when filling your pen form bottled ink rather than ink cartridges.

  • @dylanstandingalone
    @dylanstandingalone 4 года назад

    Is anyone still making pens out of hard rubber? Those pens still look nice after all these years!

    • @shahancheong9792
      @shahancheong9792  4 года назад

      Hard-rubber/ebonite is a REALLY old-fashioned manufacturing material these days. I'm not aware of any company that still makes pens out of that stuff, mostly because the colour-instability. If you leave an ebonite-ANYTHING in the sun, it fades faster than blinking.

    • @smilesketches
      @smilesketches 4 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/51mMeZx-ny4/видео.html

    • @LANCSKID
      @LANCSKID Год назад

      I make mine out of bamboo cane and/or monkeybone … 🥸

    • @timeisahumanconstruct9251
      @timeisahumanconstruct9251 5 месяцев назад

      pilot/namiki do on their higher end range

  • @grahamparr4710
    @grahamparr4710 7 лет назад +1

    Henry ford never said that!

  • @mrpilotsapien7705
    @mrpilotsapien7705 4 года назад

    So It is confirmed that Waterman Was the first Maker of the fountain pen?

    • @shahancheong9792
      @shahancheong9792  4 года назад +1

      The Waterman COMPANY was one of the first, yes. But Waterman himself was not the person who actually invented the fountain pen. He invented the three-channel feed, which made the fountain pen possible.

    • @mrpilotsapien7705
      @mrpilotsapien7705 4 года назад

      @@shahancheong9792 Im blown away! Im a Parker fan I thought they were (may because I was positiveley Manipulated into thinking so Because I Discovered a Parker 25 flighter) A piece of history I have; so I thought.
      I now have a different perspective for waterman now.

  • @user-oq2nt1wo2j
    @user-oq2nt1wo2j 4 года назад

    Damn I always thought fountain pen works because of gravity

    • @shahancheong9792
      @shahancheong9792  4 года назад +1

      Not really. Air pressure is more important. All the gravity in the world won't help it if the pen can't breathe.

  • @burg0tv446
    @burg0tv446 4 года назад

    What people first used fountain pens?

    • @shahancheong9792
      @shahancheong9792  4 года назад

      The first FPs came out in the 1880s and 1890s. The technology was REALLY crude back then but they did work. That said, they were expensive, so I think only professionals who did a lot of writing, would've bothered to buy them.

    • @burg0tv446
      @burg0tv446 4 года назад

      @@shahancheong9792 you don't answer my question.

    • @shahancheong9792
      @shahancheong9792  4 года назад

      @@burg0tv446 I just did. Read it again.

    • @burg0tv446
      @burg0tv446 4 года назад

      @@shahancheong9792 I'm not asking who. I'm talking about what fountain pen did people first used.

    • @shahancheong9792
      @shahancheong9792  4 года назад +1

      @@burg0tv446 Oh, well your first comment said "what people", not what pens, so...
      The first fountain pens were eyedropper pens, usually back in the 1880s - 1900s. The first pens with actual inbuilt filling mechanisms didn't show up until about 1902, 1905.

  • @hungryboy424
    @hungryboy424 7 лет назад

    Pity we have adverts.......annoying

  • @ShaneSteinkamp
    @ShaneSteinkamp 2 года назад

    Thanks for sharing.

  • @hungryboy424
    @hungryboy424 7 лет назад

    Pity we have adverts.......annoying