Jan 27, 2013

Pen and Ink

I've loved fountain pens forever.  After a recent bout of serious pen cleaning, I am indulging in some refilling, and am trying some new inks.  For years I thought the pen was the thing.  I've never owned a really expensive pen, at least not the kind serious fountain pen collectors pursue.  But looking at the motley assortment above, I can see that a bit of pen greed has indeed sneaked in through the years.  My standard solution to "this pen isn't writing the way I want" has clearly been "oh well, I'll buy another one."

I'm pretty sure my love affair with fountain pens started when I changed piano teachers in 7th or 8th grade.  My beloved first teacher, Mrs. Claire Stewart, was retiring to full-time momdom, after producing a series of blonde babies in my first years studying with her.  Somehow my parents discovered that the 'famous' Dr. Raymond Foote, who was reputed to be a higher level teacher, lived just across town from us.   Though he was rather intimidating as a teacher (I later found out he had studied at Juilliard with Rachmaninov himself), I was fascinated by his studio and above all, by his pen!

An unspoken rule for musicians is to mark printed scores using pencil only.   But Dr. Foote used a fountain pen!   He wrote the date IN INK on the top of each new piece I studied

and then wrote out my assignment sheet with the same pen.   I almost stopped breathing when I saw the gold nib headed towards my music book for the first time.   The boldness!   The color!   The style!  Thus was pen lust born in my (flat-chested) bosom.

Somewhere I found and bought my first fountain pen, a cheap Sheaffer, and I filled it with the closest color I could find to Dr. Foote's ink:  'Peacock Blue'.   I thought it was very romantic-sounding and grownup.  I even thought the way I got ink all over my fingers whenever I changed cartridges was romantic.

Good thing, too, because 50 years later, I still get ink on my fingers most of the time when I refill a pen.   And, silly me:  I still think of it as romantic.
I use mostly bottled ink -- thus the colorful fingers.   Cartridges are expensive and eco-wasteful.   A few brands only take cartridges, or, like some of the new, super cheap 'disposable' fountain pens, cannot be refilled at all.  But there is a whole world out there of amazing inks, accessible online.   And I have begun to stumble through it, rationalizing further purchases with the line, "hey, a new bottle of ink is so much less expensive than a new pen" ......


My ink collection is small, but that can be changed:
Still in love with Robin Hood?   Try Sherwood Green.   The 'fast dry' means it's good for lefties!
There are hundreds of blues.   I haven't even scratched the surface yet.   But give me time.

Who doesn't need a little extra mojo now and then?

Dull name, pretty good ink.


and the classic
with the easy-to-fill inner glass pocket:
This is America:  instructions are on the lid.

Here's a new ink, and a new-to-me company.   J. Herbin, making ink in France since 1670.   No fooling.
The bottle is nothing to brag about.   But read the list of colors on the box, and tell me ink can't be romantic!
I don't speak French, but I see Black Pearl, Blue Night, Wild Ivy, Golden Button, Tender Rose, Anchor Rust..... be still, my heart.  I am smitten.   I feel a wee ink order coming on.

After a protracted fling with calligraphy nibs (Osmiroid! Esterbrook!) in company with my wonderful college roommate, Mara, I devolved back to regular writing nibs in the early '90's and moved beyond the basic drugstore cartridge pen.

Although I am currently having a love affair with a new Lamy Vista demonstrator pen (clear barrel so you can see the ink supply), the bottom pen in this photo,


my fave of faves is still Li'l Blue, a small Pelikan pen. 
This is not the greatest photo, but if you look closely you can see that the gold clip of the cap is in the shape of a pelican's beak, eyes and all.  I love pelicans and Pelikans.   After a tragic fall a few years ago, Li'l Blue needed a new nib, and one of the magicians at nibs.com not only replaced the ruined nib but custom-ground it to the acme of flow/width perfection, for my personal use.

As I've perused pen blogs and tracked down pen & ink stores online, I've learned that real pen snobs, er, I mean, aficionados, like to add a little notation at the end of their handwritten letters, mentioning the type of pen and the ink they have just used to write it with.   So imagine that I've handwritten this entire blog for you.  And imagine this below my signature, at the bottom of the page:

Jan 14, 2013

Cats in Winter

What's a cat to do in winter, when it's cold and snowy outside?   There are so many choices.
There's:
bathing...


snacking ...


hide and seek ...


seed ordering ...


ski bag time ...



shoulder time ...


looking handsome ...



looking innocent ....


keeping an eye on the 'hood ....


and of course, sleeping...
At Christmas time, there is a brief interlude of excitement, for aficionados of ...
boxes ...
bags ...

gifts ...

and a certain amount of confusion about wrapping paper in one's basket.


After all that is cleared away, there is a return to
sleeping...

and that perennial favorite....
Kitty Television!
Of course they only watch one station, namely the Bird Channel.


It's on every day from dawn to dusk, and features a wide cast of characters.   One sunny day last week, I took pity on the chickens and let them out to roam the dormant garden, where deep snow hid and protected my perennials from their destructive pecking and scratching.   They found their way over to the back deck, where I had set out a tray of tasty grass for a winter greens feast.
Meanwhile, inside, sleeping cats awoke.
Hey, what's this? Kitty Television got a new channel.  The birds are so much bigger and more real -- it must be IMAX 3-D!!!!
Question is, who's watching whom?
Meanwhile, the chickens, watching the Cat Channel, are asking themselves, "Who's that?!"

Baaaawwwwwwwkkkkkkkkk!