Other Definitions
fountain pen (dict)

Fountain Pen

A fountain pen is a writing instrument, more specifically a pen, that contains a reservoir of water-based ink that is fed to a nib through a "feed" via a combination of gravity and capillary action. Refilling ink either involves replacing an ink cartridge, filling the pen with an eyedropper, or using one of a variety of internal mechanisms to suck ink from a bottle.

History

The earliest historical record of a reservoir pen dates to the 10th century, and the earliest reservoir pens to survive date to the 18th century. Progress was slow, however, up until the early 19th century, after which there was a steadily accelerating stream of fountain pen patents and pens in production. It was only after three key inventions were in place, however, that the fountain pen became a widely popular writing instrument. Those inventions were the iridium-tipped gold nib, hard rubber, and free-flowing ink. The first fountain pens making use of all these key ingredients came out in the 1850s, but it was in the 1880s that the era of the mass-produced fountain pen finally began. The dominant American producers in this pioneer era were Waterman and Wirt, based in New York City and Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania, respectively. Waterman soon outstripped Wirt, along with the many companies that sprang up to fill the new and growing fountain pen market, and remained the market leader up until the early 1920s. In Europe, German Gnther Wagner's office supplies house (started in 1871), introduced the Pelikan pen in 1929, based upon the acquisition of patents for solid-ink fountain pens from the factory of Slavoljub Penkala from Croatia (patented 1907, in mass production since 1911), and the patent of the Hungarian Theodor Kovacs for the modern piston filler by 1925. The decades that followed saw many technological innovations in the manufacture of fountain pens. Celluloid gradually replaced hard rubber, which enabled production in a much wider range of colors and designs. At the same time, manufacturers experimented with new filling systems. The inter-war period saw the introduction of some of the most notable models, such as the Parker Duofold and Vacumatic, Sheaffer's Lifetime Balance series, and the Pelikan 100. During the 1940s and 1950s, fountain pens retained their dominance: early ballpoint pens were expensive, prone to leaks and had irregular inkflow, while the fountain pen continued to benefit from the combination of mass production and craftsmanship. This period saw the launch of innovative models such as the Parker 51, the Sheaffer Snorkel and the Eversharp Skyline, while the Esterbrook J series of lever-fill models with interchangeable steel nibs offered inexpensive reliability to the masses. By the 1960s, refinements in ballpoint pen production gradually ensured its dominance over the fountain pen for casual use. Although cartridge-filler fountain pens are still in common use in France and Germany, particularly among schoolchildren, modern manufacturers (especially Montblanc) now market the fountain pen as a collectible or a status symbol, rather than an everyday writer. Current fountain pen manufacturers include Cross, Montblanc, Parker, Pelikan, Namiki/Pilot, Rotring, Sheaffer, Hero (from China) and Waterman. Practically all fountain pen companies offer ink alongside their pens, but companies exclusively producing inks (mostly for fountain pens) exist, including Private Reserve, Nathan Tardif's Noodler's Ink, Diamine and J. Herbin. Sometimes manufacturer of fountain pens sells some other manufacturer's ink under their brand name; For example fountain pen ink of A.T. Cross is actually made by Pelikan and fountain pen inks of Bexley are actually made by Private Reserve and fountain pen inks of Yard-o-Led are actually made by Diamine. It is speculated, that J. Herbin is actual manufacturer of fountain pen inks of Omas. Pilot is one of only a few companies making disposable fountain pens (under name Varsity and Vpen). Pilot also makes higher-end pens under brand name Namiki, including the "Vanishing Point", where the nib retracts like a that of a ballpoint.

Using fountain pens

Together with the mass-manufactured pencil and the introduction of cheap wood-based paper, the fountain pen was responsible for a major transformation in writing and in the nature of paperwork during the 19th century. They gave birth to the precursor of the modern office, which would only come about at the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th with the gradual introduction of the typewriter and early duplicating machines. The fountain pen, and, to a lesser extent, the pencil, replaced the relatively hard-to-use combination of the dip pen, blotter, and sand tray employed till then for writing. Using a dip pen was in fact a complex and often frustrating exercise due to the irregular flow of ink from the nib and other factors. In a sense, the introduction of the fountain pen can be compared to the advent of the early command line word processor and the dot matrix printer which appeared before graphic word processing software and the laser printer. Fountain pens are widely regarded to be the best tools for writing or drawing with ink on paper. However, they are more expensive, harder to maintain, and more fragile than a ballpoint pen. In addition, they cannot be used with the various oil- and particle-based inks (such as India ink) prized by artists, as can a dip pen, reed, or quill.

Nibs

The nib of the fountain pen is usually made of stainless steel or gold. Gold nibs are tipped with a hard, wear-resistant alloy that typically utilizes metals from the platinum group. Tipping material is often called "iridium", even though hardly any penmakers still use that metal in their tipping alloys. Steel nibs may also have harder tips; those with steel points will wear more rapidly due to abrasion by the paper. The nib usually has one slit cut down its center, to convey the ink down the nib. The whole nib narrows to a point where the ink is transferred to the paper. Broad calligraphy pens may have several slits in the nib to increase ink flow and help distribute it evenly across the broad point. Nibs divided into three 'tines' are commonly known as 'music' nibs, as their broad line is suited for writing musical scores. Although the most common nibs end in a point of various sizes (fine, medium, broad), other nib shapes are available. Examples of this are oblique, reverse oblique, stub and italic. Fountain pens dating from the first half of the 20th century are more likely to have flexible nibs, suited to the favored handwriting styles of the period. By the 1940s, writing preferences had shifted towards stiffer nibs that could withstand the greater pressure required for writing through copy paper to create duplicate documents.

Filling Mechanisms

The earliest fountain pens were all eyedropper fillers - that is, the pen was essentially an empty resevoir which one would fill with an eyedropper. This was a relatively complicated process and could give way to leakage in lower-end pens. However, the absence of complicated mechanisms meant that this system could hold much more ink than a pen of comparable size. As a result, eyedropper pens are sometimes still manufactured today but have been largely replaced by more convenient methods. For example model Recife Crystal is eyedropper. Fountain pens of David Oscarson can be used as eydropper and with cartridges and converter. After the eyedropper filler came a "second generation" of fillers, almost all involving pen sacs. The sacs, generally consisting of rubber (but nowadays sometimes made of silicone), were flexible containers within the pen that would be compressed and released to drive out and suck in whatever the user desired. The downside of these was that they would require more space than eyedropper fillers, and were prone to hardening as they aged. The Conklin crescent filler, introduced c. 1901, was one of the first mass-produced self-filling pen designs. The crescent filling system employs an arch-shaped crescent attached to a rigid metal pressure bar, with the crescent portion protruding from the pen through a slot and the pressure bar inside the barrel. A second component, a C-shaped hard rubber ring, is located between the crescent and the barrel. Ordinarily, the ring blocks the crescent from pushing down. However, when it comes time to fill the pen, one simply turns the ring around the barrel until the crescent matches up to the hole in the ring, allowing one to push down the crescent and squeeze the internal pen sac. Following the crescent filler came a series of systems of increasing complexity, reaching their apogee in the Sheaffer Touchdown/Snorkel system. With the introduction of cartridge pens by Waterman-Jif, though, many of these systems were phased out in favour of convenience (but even worse capacity). Today, most pens either utilise piston-fills or cartridges, although the latter can be converted to piston-fill with the use of a convertor. The piston filler, first introduced in the original Pelikan of 1929 (although the concept was from Croatia), was somewhat of an anomaly in an age of sac-filling pens. The idea was a simple one: merely twist a knob at the end of the pen, and an internal piston will drive up and down the barrel, forcing ink out or in. While the capacity of these pens was not comparable to some of the better sac systems, and certainly not the eyedropper pen, they offered convenience only second to the cartridge. The reason for their lacklustre capacities is the size of the piston unit. In order to effectively drive the whole way down the barrel, some of the earlier models had to devote as much as half of the pen length to a complicated system. The advent of telescoping pistons has in some respects remedied this, but piston fillers are still sometimes foregone today in favour of vintage methods.

Cartridges

Most European fountain pen brands (for example Pelikan, Waterman, Montblanc, Monteverde and Rotring) and Bexley use so called "international cartridges" (AKA "european cartridges" or "standard cartridges" or "universal cartridges"), in short or long size. It is some kind of standard, so international cartridges of some manufacturer can be used in most fountain pens that accepts international cartridges. Also converters that are meant to substitute international cartridges can be used in most fountain pens that accept international cartridges. Some very compact fountain pens (for example Waterman Ici et La and Monteverde Diva) accept only short international cartridges. Converters can not be used in them (except so called mini-converter by Monteverde). Many fountain pen manufacturers have developed their own proprietary cartridges, for example Parker, Lamy, Sheaffer and Cross (filled with ink by Pelikan) and Namiki. Fountain pens of Aurora accept same cartridges that Parker uses. Some very compact fountain pens accept only proprietary cartridges made by the same company that made that pen, for example Sheaffer Agio Compact and Sheaffer Prelude Compact. It is not possible to use converter in them at all. In such pens the only way to use some other brand of ink is to put bottled ink to empty cartridge with syringe.

Fountain pens as works of art

Fountain pens are often prized as works of art. Ornate pens are sometimes made of precious metals and jewels; others are inlaid with lacquer designs in a process known as maki-e. An avid community of pen enthusiasts collect and use antique and modern pens and also collect and exchange information about old and modern inks, ink bottles, and inkwells. Collectors often tend to prize being able to actually use the antiques, instead of merely placing them under glass for show. This is not to say that all fountain pens are collectors' items, however; good quality steel pens are available cheaply, and there are even some "disposable" fountain pens available.

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
the forsyte saga
azul
intel 8051
relationships between jewish religious movements
intel 8048
georg trakl
dugongidae
triton ii
mobile triton
triton vx
dugong
8.3 (computing)
8514 (display standard)
88open
california sea lion
jean de la fontaine
marine mammal
sea lion
pinniped
self programming language
funeral in berlin
billion dollar brain
tom computer language
kim
personal video recorder
margaret atwood
inkwell
pewter
homeobox
fisting
chasing amy
kevin smith
university of southern mississippi
steller's sea lion
so far, so good... so what!
rust in peace
countdown to extinction
youthanasia
hidden treasures
cryptic writings
risk (album)
the world needs a hero
whit
rude awakening (megadeth album)