Edward
Bartender
- Messages
- 25,084
- Location
- London, UK
Those Tornados look nice. They remind me of a Duke fountain pen I have - German pen, but I bought it in Beijing (ironically, it's been used by royalty while in my ownership, which probably means somebody would pay big money for it!) I find it's not hard to find a mid-price option that looks nice these days from Parker and the likes - pleasingly so, given that you don't see many people using fountain pens with great regularity.
I picked up a mint, unused Parker 21 fp and pencil set on eBay a few years ago, but yes - problem is I've never been able to bring myself to deflower it! Might end up selling that one; I don't have the space to stored stuff I won't use.
While vintage P51s are still available, I'd have thought Parker could easily sell a mid-price run of a pen that looked eternally the same but with a converter / cartridge option (not my ideal, but probably would reach a wider market these days). They did do a LE anniversary model a few years ago, but it was an eye-watering price as memory serves.
I always advise my undergraduates that a fountain pen will improve their handwriting greatly. For myself, I was the last year in primary school that, when we first switched to pen and ink from pencil at the age of nine, were required to use a fountain pen. That didn't last long, and initially, I was glad: being left handed, the fountain pen had required a certain learning curve. I took it up again of my own volition at the age of thirteen, as I liked using a fountain pen, and it certainly did improve my handwriting. At university, I mostly used a Parker jotter for notes at speed in lectures, then a fountain for other things. I wish I had thought to use a fountain pen in exams, as I'd have avoided a lot of handcramps that way (in my day, the standard assessment was a three-hour exam, writing solidly throughout). Every so often a student will take my advice, and they always notice how much easier it is to keep writing as the pen simply glides over the page, and how much their handwriting tends to improve.
If interested in a P51 fountain pen then I'd recommend finding one with its matching (working!) mechanical pencil, with the matching set housed in their original Parker case & preferably including the original instruction sheet. But of course if the set is too nice, you might not want to actually use them!
I picked up a mint, unused Parker 21 fp and pencil set on eBay a few years ago, but yes - problem is I've never been able to bring myself to deflower it! Might end up selling that one; I don't have the space to stored stuff I won't use.
While vintage P51s are still available, I'd have thought Parker could easily sell a mid-price run of a pen that looked eternally the same but with a converter / cartridge option (not my ideal, but probably would reach a wider market these days). They did do a LE anniversary model a few years ago, but it was an eye-watering price as memory serves.
I realised the other day, or rather my wife realised for me how awful my handwriting is so I set myself the goal of improving it. I thought a good start would be getting a fountain pen, I hadn't used one since my school days many many years ago. After much googling I decided to get a couple of Chinese pens from EBay. I absolutely love them and so cheap. You can get clones of most well known and respected makes for next to nothing. A new fountain pen all the way from Shanghai to my front door for £1.12 . It looks wonderful and it writes beautifully. I know it doesn't have the same pedigree as an original but for the price you can't go wrong.
I always advise my undergraduates that a fountain pen will improve their handwriting greatly. For myself, I was the last year in primary school that, when we first switched to pen and ink from pencil at the age of nine, were required to use a fountain pen. That didn't last long, and initially, I was glad: being left handed, the fountain pen had required a certain learning curve. I took it up again of my own volition at the age of thirteen, as I liked using a fountain pen, and it certainly did improve my handwriting. At university, I mostly used a Parker jotter for notes at speed in lectures, then a fountain for other things. I wish I had thought to use a fountain pen in exams, as I'd have avoided a lot of handcramps that way (in my day, the standard assessment was a three-hour exam, writing solidly throughout). Every so often a student will take my advice, and they always notice how much easier it is to keep writing as the pen simply glides over the page, and how much their handwriting tends to improve.