Shangas
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 6,116
- Location
- Melbourne, Australia
Hey guys.
In about a month and a half, I will be attending the 2012 Melbourne Pen Show. More about that event in the "Events" board when it comes nearer.
Anyway...
I'm a member of the Melbourne Pen Group. And for the past few years, we've held a table at the yearly pen show, putting on various displays and exhibits for visitors to view and admire. We've done various things, from antiques to ephemera, pen-displays, racks, cases and so-forth. We always seem to focus on the HISTORY of writing.
In keeping with that theme, my prospective table-display for this year is along the line of "The Golden Era of Writing".
I want to show the golden age of writing. What it was like during the 1920s and 30s, when fountain pens and typewriters were in every home, when names like "Royal", "Sheaffer", and "Esterbrook", were household names. When going to the store to buy ink didn't mean that your Hewitt & Packard printer hadn't started churning out bad print and when blotting-paper was sold in huge sheets.
To this end, my display for this year is taking on the look of a vintage desktop. I want it to look like a sort of 1920s/30s timewarp. I want it to show what a typical desk in an office, or in a home study, or a den, might look like back in the Golden Era.
This is what my prospective display looks like at the moment:
Here we have, from left to right...
- Vintage desk-blotter.
- Typewriter manual.
- Typewriter ribbon.
- Rocker-blotter.
- Underwood Standard Portable, from 1926.
- Inkwell.
- Vintage 'SWAN' ink-bottle.
- Glass nib-caddy and pen-rest.
- Copy-paper.
- Fountain pen. 1920s Wahl, gold-filled.
- Advertising-blotters.
- Vintage SKRIP ink-bottle.
- 1928 Parker Duofold.
- 1910s Waterman Ideal; 18kt gold.
I'd appreciate suggestions from other people. What can I add to this to make it look more authentic? For example, is it too clean? Should I spray ink onto the blotting-paper? What other things might be found on a desk or in an office/study of this period?
I was thinking of, for example, adding a simple ash-tray, maybe a cheap print-out of an old newspaper, all folded up. Envelopes, perhaps. A seal, sealing-wax, manilla folders, those old-fashioned yellow wood pencils (I have a few lying around), and so-forth.
V.C. Brunswick suggested stuff like magazines, newspapers, scrunched up, half-finished letters, and things of that nature.
Any suggestions at all would be welcome. I want this to look as if it was just pinched off a desk from 1930 and brought to the 21st century. Just keep in mind that the space I have to work with is a little limited. The desk-blotter, and about six inches around its edges, is all the space I shall have to work with (this will be sitting on a trestle-table at the show, for people to see).
I know that this is a long time in advance, but I'm posting it NOW, so that if anyone has any suggestions that I decide to act on, I'll have time to go out and possibly find some nice vintage bits and pieces at the flea-market, to complete the look that I'm after.
Naturally I'll be decked in vintage-style attire for the event. Or as vintage a style as the November weather in Australia will permit (it being summer at that time of the year).
Let the ideas come!
In about a month and a half, I will be attending the 2012 Melbourne Pen Show. More about that event in the "Events" board when it comes nearer.
Anyway...
I'm a member of the Melbourne Pen Group. And for the past few years, we've held a table at the yearly pen show, putting on various displays and exhibits for visitors to view and admire. We've done various things, from antiques to ephemera, pen-displays, racks, cases and so-forth. We always seem to focus on the HISTORY of writing.
In keeping with that theme, my prospective table-display for this year is along the line of "The Golden Era of Writing".
I want to show the golden age of writing. What it was like during the 1920s and 30s, when fountain pens and typewriters were in every home, when names like "Royal", "Sheaffer", and "Esterbrook", were household names. When going to the store to buy ink didn't mean that your Hewitt & Packard printer hadn't started churning out bad print and when blotting-paper was sold in huge sheets.
To this end, my display for this year is taking on the look of a vintage desktop. I want it to look like a sort of 1920s/30s timewarp. I want it to show what a typical desk in an office, or in a home study, or a den, might look like back in the Golden Era.
This is what my prospective display looks like at the moment:
Here we have, from left to right...
- Vintage desk-blotter.
- Typewriter manual.
- Typewriter ribbon.
- Rocker-blotter.
- Underwood Standard Portable, from 1926.
- Inkwell.
- Vintage 'SWAN' ink-bottle.
- Glass nib-caddy and pen-rest.
- Copy-paper.
- Fountain pen. 1920s Wahl, gold-filled.
- Advertising-blotters.
- Vintage SKRIP ink-bottle.
- 1928 Parker Duofold.
- 1910s Waterman Ideal; 18kt gold.
I'd appreciate suggestions from other people. What can I add to this to make it look more authentic? For example, is it too clean? Should I spray ink onto the blotting-paper? What other things might be found on a desk or in an office/study of this period?
I was thinking of, for example, adding a simple ash-tray, maybe a cheap print-out of an old newspaper, all folded up. Envelopes, perhaps. A seal, sealing-wax, manilla folders, those old-fashioned yellow wood pencils (I have a few lying around), and so-forth.
V.C. Brunswick suggested stuff like magazines, newspapers, scrunched up, half-finished letters, and things of that nature.
Any suggestions at all would be welcome. I want this to look as if it was just pinched off a desk from 1930 and brought to the 21st century. Just keep in mind that the space I have to work with is a little limited. The desk-blotter, and about six inches around its edges, is all the space I shall have to work with (this will be sitting on a trestle-table at the show, for people to see).
I know that this is a long time in advance, but I'm posting it NOW, so that if anyone has any suggestions that I decide to act on, I'll have time to go out and possibly find some nice vintage bits and pieces at the flea-market, to complete the look that I'm after.
Naturally I'll be decked in vintage-style attire for the event. Or as vintage a style as the November weather in Australia will permit (it being summer at that time of the year).
Let the ideas come!
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