Wednesday, 12 November 2014

Wahl-Eversharp Skyscraper - My first pics!

It arrived on Fountain Pen Day and here it is, the Wahl-Eversharp Skyline Skyscraper....


What? Can't see it behind the Crystal?

How's this?...

Impressed?

The Skyscraper comes complete (as a limited edition) with certificate and general information; with the pen initially coming securely in this little plastic cover:
The Crystal display unit comes boxed and well protected from the evils of the post:



But the Skyscraper does not just soar because of its packaging (as good as the packaging is). The Fountain Pen itself is actually quite beautiful:





  

The detail on this pen is just supurb.

As for the official blurb; this is what Wahl Eversharp has to say: 

"Spanning the first 100 years of WAHL-EVERSHARP history, perhaps nothing embodies the essence and spirit of achievement of that era more than the iconic, soaring skyscraper. Thus we chose the skyscraper as the emblematic design for our most ambitious pen design to date. It naturally takes place at the top of the entire Skyline Collection of fine writing instruments. It's quintessential Mid-Century Modern "Clean-Line", harks back to the peak of achievements in industrial design."

Bottom line, this is a lovely looking fountain pen. 

What I can't tell you yet is what it's like to write with. The information leaflet boasts a semi-flex nib so I'm looking forward to trying this out. I haven't inked it yet - I have a lot of pens I inked for FPD that I really want to use first - but watch this space for a writing sample some time in the future.

Until next tine...

From stoplights to skyscrapers, turn anywhere in civilization and you will see imagination at work. It's in our inventions, advances and remedies and how a single parent masterminds each day. Imagination is boundless, surrounds us and resides in us all.

Saturday, 8 November 2014

And the winner is...

I set you a challenge.
You set your minds straight
Delivered with feeling
and little debate.
The outcome is awesome
I'm truly in Zen
You've shown all-and-sundry
The power of PEN!


Thank you all for a truly wonderful effort in submitting your entries to my Fountain Pen Day Competition.

As I mentioned in my first blog on this competition, the winners are not chosen at random; but are the poems that I was most moved by. Yes, I know this may put me at odds with some who may argue the relative merits of one poem over another; but that is what is so wonderful about literature and art, there is no right and wrong answer!

So thank you again. Especially to the winners who knew just the right pistons to turn to deliver the best outcomes.

Picking the first few, was honestly a difficult task. In the end, I went with my emotions and this is what you delivered:

FIRST:
Eric Aycock for this beautiful piece:

The light dims, as the pen moves
Describing life and places
From humble thoughts to lonely faces.
Observing a life at a passing glance
Processing and distilling each experience to a word
Be it known or new, strange, familiar, or absurd.
An ageless grace of love
Romantic, heartfelt, and pure.
A pen stroke creates at a glance
A look of change so demur,
The Poet creates a world
With each stroke, the meaning grows deeper
And soaks each phrase and word

Like a pot of tea left to steep.

Eric will receive the Jinhao of his colour choice, one of two Field Notes notebooks, the Pressy and Pressy t-shirt and a collection of FPD loot. Well done and thankyou Eric.

SECOND:
Geoffrey Bennett Speer for his imagery and humour:

You can take my fountain pen away
And force me to write all day with a 
Vulture talon dipped in blood,
Or a greenbrier thorn inked up with mud,
Some axle grease on a piece of barbed wire,
Or a red hot poker just drawn from the fire,
Creosote on the end of railroad spike,
Or lipstick on the butt of a Lucky Strike,
I'd crank out verse like Poe, Byron or Donne
With communion wine from an ole tattoo gun,
I'd rather hand copy the phone book
With any of them
Than sign my own name
With a cheap ballpoint pen!

Geoffrey gets the Jinhao of his colour choice too, the other of the Fieldnotes Notebooks, a Pilot notebook and FPD bits. Great effort!

THIRD:
Gerald Taylor for his take on the eternal lament of the Pen acquirer :

I think I have a problem
That is plain to see
Fountain pens keep coming
Through the mail to me

I tell myself "don't worry"
It will be all right
But still I keep on shopping
Especially at night

That's it I've had enough!
I swear I'll buy no more!
I just found three new slips
All waiting on my door

But oh there are those colours
Materials that delight
And all with golden nibs
I cannot win this fight

I give up.
I want all the pens.

Gerald gets a Jinhao (he'll need to tell me his colour preferences incase the first two have taken his preference) FPD bookmark and bits. This is the second time Gerald has done well in an Eclectidbits competition, clearly a skilled communicator! :D

... and FOURTH
Aumbrine for this thoughtful work:

The paper in my notebook
Waited with abated breath
As its lover wrote out
the words to MacBeth

The ink flowed out 
Like a melody to a song
As my pen
Stringed the notes along

My pen and I 
Do this dance, you see
This love affair
Is hard to believe
That someone like me 
Who had no sound to this voice
Who now writes words
Like it's even a choice

Give me a pen, a nib
And some ink if you please
My mind, body and heart
Will surrender with ease

This tongue will no longer fold
With stories untold

This voice, it will echo
Words laced with gold

Aumbrine also wins a Jinhao (I will again need to know colour preferences incase the first two have taken your preference), FPD bookmark and paraphernalia. 

Of course there are still more pens and FPD material so there are a few more winners too. Congratulations also to:

  • Chris Edwards
  • Josiah
  • Robin Keys
  • Bonnie
  • Raschon
  • Janet Faught and 
  • Sara

All of whom will get a Jinhao plus stuff! Just email me your details so that I can send them. By all means tell me your colour preferences and I'll see what I can do  - but no promises!

For everyone else, thankyou again for participating and let's do it all again next year!


Until next tine...


Eclectidbits



Fairwell Fountain Pen Day

We here in the Southern Hemisphere have now well-and-truly bid Fountain Pen Day goodbye :(

Of course you Northerners still have some time to go and we're happy to let you try to catch up - although we know you never will! 

The day has been glorious!  

My FPD has been marked with two extremely well timed arrivals:
The Wahl-Eversharp Skyline SkyScraper Fountain Pen

Only the box for now; I'll de-cant it once I get it home. More pics to come.
Delta Unica (from Goulet Pens) - ain't she a cutie?

So a productive day indeed!

Full marks to Mr Fountain Pen Day, Cary Yeager, for his outstanding work in growing this day in such a short time (starting in 2012) to the fabulous success of this year.

I will not be announcing the winner of my competition until after the Northerners finally say adieu to FPD; but the standard has been great and people have really produced some marvellous poetry, entering into the competition with verve!

Very few of you have left email addresses, so a direct email with your details would be helpful.

So, until next tine (or at least tomorrow when the winners are announced),


EB

 Here are a few of my FPD instagram pics:


From top: FPGeeks badge; Omas Arco 360 (don't you just love that pattern?); the Wahl-Eversharp Skyline SkyScraper, Omas Alba

The box inside of which lies the goodies for my FPD competition

My Omas Extra Lucens says goodnight to Fountain Pen Day for another year!

Sunday, 2 November 2014

Melbourne Pen Show Review

Hello all, and welcome to the week before Fountain Pen Day (November 7) and my review of the Melbourne (Australia) Pen Show for 2014.

While Australia may not boast the fountain pen retail networks of USA and Europe; we more than make up for it in enthusiasm and a delight in sharing our passion.

"Passion" was the theme (not officially, but to my mind at least), that saw a show this year (one day only) that focussed on the collector rather than the retailer - and was better for it.

Yes you could buy (and of course I did - see later); but it was the passion of the collectors showing, talking, selling and explaining their obsessions that gave the show its zing!

As you entered the show in the Malvern Town Hall, the room was a buzz with quillidyllic overtones (my word).


Guido Staltari with his Visconti's, and other Italian beauties
The passion, of course, started before even going to the Show, as Quillidealists (also my word) from all over Australia (well, I know at least two from Sydney who came along) prepared their hauls for show-and-tell on arrival. Here was mine:


From left: Delta Zen, Delta Stantuffo Mocha with Rose Gold, Visconti Homo Sapiens Crystal, Visconti Pininfarina, Montegrappa Extra 1930, Omas 556 GF, Omas Extra Lucens LE, Edison Menlo in Tibaldi Impero celluloid, Montblanc Proust WE, Montblanc Heritage 1912, Omas 360 Arco, and the appropriately themed Aurora Oceania. 
 Here both veterans and the uninitiated was presented with the wares of many stalwarts of the Melbourne Pen world including: 

  • Old Post Office Pens (and their Diamine inks, Sheaffer's and Conway Stewarts),
  • David Van Cuylenburg of "Pen Collectors of Melbourne", Peter Ford of AusPens.com, 
  • Dr Bernard Swift and his eclectic collection, 
  • Pam Sutton and her extraordinary Pencil collection, 
  • Alan Marrone (who also had an antique or two),
  • Mike Allen (antiques, pens, jewellery and general mayhem),
  • Guido Staltari of FCI luxury pens (Visconti +)
  • the fabulous folk from the Melbourne Pen Group with their quillomania clearly on display.

and more...

Old Post Office Pens had Pens-a-plenty!
David Van Cuylenburg of "Pen Collectors of Melbourne"

Peter Ford of AusPens - looking trim, taut and terrific!

And the wares we were shown were infinitely ware-able! 

Conway Stewart may be out of business, but not here:





Pam Sutton's pencils were beautifully presented and, well, beautiful!




... and the array of other pens, papers and leather on display was just what every Quillophile (yes, another me-ism) could hope for.





Transehe Design pens [copper my favourite - top, fourth from the left - just a bit on the $$ side :( ]


And so to my purchases (*embarrassed flush).

I'm not used to seeing Omas at these shows, but maybe someone knew I was coming! This pen, based on the Omas S2001, was produced specifically for the Eni Company and includes their logo on the nib:



thank you Alan Marrone

and these two inks: 
Visconti Turquoise (because SBRE Brown keeps instagram-ing how good it is) and Diamine Red Dragon (just because)

The Show done, the Melbourne Pen Group hosted a lovely dinner at the Tower Hotel, Hawthorn where we amiably chatted and constructively de-constructed one another's pen habits and pens (with a heavy emphasis on my own humble offerings of the day):

Next year, another show! So, until next tine (or at least until Fountain Pen Day and the announcement of the winners of my Fountain Pen Day rhyming competition)

Keep writing!