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Vintage American Pens
 

Pens on this page are part of my personal collection and are not for sale. If there is a magnifying-glass symbol (Magnifying glass) next to a pen, click the magnifying glass to view a zoomed version for more detail.

 
What pens am I carrying today? Find out here.
 
Third Tier, With or Without ID

As with most industries, manufacturers in the pen business tend to stratify: the “big boys” (in the U.S.A., the Big Four, or the first tier), the guys in the middle (second tier), and the bottom feeders (third tier). Some third-tier manufacturers produced very good pens, and some produced, well, junk. The former tended to put their names on their products, and among these the name of Majestic is well known. Majestic pens ranged from models of remarkably high quality to models on which the company would have been wiser to omit its name. The amber marble pen shown here, a model whose name I do not know, is a very good pen; it features a nice 14K nib, and its celluloid body is as well made as those of much more respected pens. At 45/32" capped, 55/16" posted, it‘s a very small pen, but I like it for its looks and because a client gave it to me.

Fountain pen image Magnifying glass

This nameless pen is one of many made during the Great Depression, and it was probably priced at less than $1.00. It measures 4½" capped, 525/32" posted. The sac is not glued to the section, as in most quality pens; rather, it is compressed by a ring on the inside of the barrel. This method is less reliable, but it is also less costly to produce. The iridium-tipped manifold steel nib was once two-tone in color. I keep this pen because it was the first decent pen I found “in the wild” when I began collecting.

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One of the best third-tier brands for a long time was Diamond Point, also known as Diamond P. P. During the Depression, as did many companies, Diamond Point began to slide toward bankruptcy, and the quality of their pens slipped dramatically. At 53/32" capped, 67/16" posted, my late Diamond Point is cheap, but it isn’t quite a bottom feeder. Its nib is gold-plated brass, but at least it’s not imprinted 14 KT like so many other cheap nibs of that time!

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Here is a DU-PONT syringe-filling pen from the World War II years. Most of these pens hqve celluloid section fused to the barrel and are pretty much not restorable, but this one has a hard rubber section. I’ve fitted this pen with a Pelikan M200 nib, with plating removed from the tines to mimic the original DURIUM TIPPED nib’s design.

Fountain pen Magnifying glass
Fountain pen Magnifying glass
Fountain pen Magnifying glass
 
User-Changeable Nibs Arrow Profile

Manufacturer logoScorned by some collectors as “poor man’s” pens, Esterbrook fountain pens today are sought after by serious writers. These inexpensive but well-made pens, such as the “Dollar Pen” and the classic Model J family members here, were designed with a user-interchangeable screw-in “Renew-Point” nib assembly. Renew-Points came in a broad array of sizes and types; the customer could choose pen and nib separately for a truly personalized writing instrument. The inexpensive steel nibs are frequently a little lacking in smoothness.

My Copper (Brown) Dollar Pen appears to have been made in 1942, as I believe that was the only year Esterbrook made these unusual “bandless” pens. This pen has a Nº 2668 medium nib with a period-correct flat comb feed. At 47/16" capped and 513/16" posted, it’s obviously the smallest of the Dollar Pens. But it’s cute, and it’s lovable.

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The next pen, a Foliage Green single-jewel J, has a Nº 8968 broad PdAg nib; it’s 415/16" capped and 6" posted. This single-jewel pen, with its three-ribbed cap jewel and clip with no ESTERBROOK imprint, is the first version of the great lever-filling Js; and it’s also an uncommon specimen because of its PdAg nib and its wartime palladium furniture.

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Following the green J is a Cobalt Blue double-jewel J with a Nº 1551 “school” nib; it’s 51/16" capped and 61/16" posted.

Fountain pen image Magnifying glass
Fountain pen image Magnifying glass

I found this delicious Tempo Red post-1957 CH for sale on one of the Internet fora I frequent. The smallest member of the J family at 413/32" capped and 511/32" posted, my CH has a Nº 9128 (semi)flex nib. So often, these little purse pens are in terrible condition, scratched and cracked and dirty. This one appeared to be uninked when I bought it, and it’s a real pleasure to have one this nice.

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No More Stained Pockets Arrow Restoration Work

Manufacturer logoEarly fountain pens were all too likely to leak in the user’s pocket; caps were just a slip-fit onto the section, feeds were leaky, and sacs could burst. The G. S. Parker company’s ultimate solution was the button-filled Parker Jack-Knife Safety pen (introduced in 1912), the predecessor of the famous Duofold. Its Lucky Curve feed (1894) relies on capillary action to drain excess ink, its barrel has no filler-lever slot, and its cap screws securely onto the barrel. Like many other pens of the time, the Jack-Knife Safety was sold in several sizes. My chased Nº 23½ Jack-Knife Safety was made about 1918. 55/16" capped and 613/32" posted, it’s large enough to be good in the hand, but it’s not the largest model. Its flexible italic nib lends a strong character to its writing.

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The way to the button-filling Jack-Knife Safety was not a single step. One of the elements of the solution was the button filler, and Parker began making button-filling pens in about 1912. But these pens were fitted with the old unreliable cone caps, made less likely to leak by the elimination of breather holes. The back end of the pen was tightly sealed by a screw-on blind cap, and these two elements made up Parker’s “Safety-Sealed” system. My early button filler, made from parts, is 517/32" capped and 621/32" posted. Its soft medium nib works well for general use.

Fountain pen image Magnifying glass
Fountain pen image Magnifying glass
 
Smooth as a Finger tip

Manufacturer logoThumbnail imageThe Moore Pen Company was founded in 1899 as the American Fountain Pen Company, marketing a “safety” pen designed by Morris W. Moore. In 1917, the company was renamed, and it gradually began making high-quality but otherwise ordinary lever-filler pens. In 1946, it introduced the Moore Finger tip Pen, an innovative pen designed to compete with the streamlined Parker “51”. The Finger tip was an excellent, smooth pen — I really like the way mine writes, with its fine/medium nib — but it was also a sales disaster, possibly because it was too different from regular pens. After only five years, Moore retired the Finger tip and began making mediocre squeeze-filling pens. In 1956, the company went out of business. My Finger tip is 5” capped and 63/8" posted. (Click the thumbnail for a larger image of the famous Finger tip nib/section assembly.)

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Vintage American Pens
 
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