Tabs

14 May 2012

10 Years

War restrictions in Japan in the 1930s and 1940s severely reduced the availability of some metals for the pen industry. As a result, most (if not all) nibs at the time were made of steel. These are the shiro” nibs that have already shown up on these chronicles.

After the war, the availability of gold was slowly increasing and some luxury pens were equipped with nibs made of this noble metal. However, many a company played the trick of confusion between gold plated and actual solid gold nibs. The official response came from the almighty Ministry of Industry (actually, the Ministry of International Trade and Industry, MITI): The Industrial Standardization Law was enacted in 1949 and by 1954 the Japan Industrial Standards, JIS, logo imprinted on nibs guaranteed the material out of which they were made.

Platinum (Platinum Sangyo Co. Ltd. at the time), on its side, created the 10 year guaranteed nib in 1953 after perfecting the manufacturing process. Let us remember now that the main argument for the use of gold over steel is the much higher resistance to corrosion of the noble metal.

Platinum Honest 60, on the left, and Presidente pens, on the right, disassembled.

On the left, the Platinum Honest 60 nib. On the right, that of the Presidente. Both are identical "10 Years" nibs save for the obvious gold plating of the later.

On these chronicles, paradoxically, the first encounter with a 10 year nib by the hand of
the nominally Spanish pen Presidente. Of course, we now know that it was a variation of the Platinum Honest, whose nib, we could also see, was also engraved with the "10 years" sign. But these are not the only examples. 10-year nibs were made in a number of shapes and sizes, and these are some examples.

These nibs belong to an aerometric Honest (left), to a copy of the Parker 51 (center) and to an oversized luxury lever filler (right).

From left to right on the previous picture:
--Nail shaped nib for an aerometric Honest pen.
--Hooded nib. The pen is basically a copy of the Parker 51.
--Big size 20 open nib. It belongs to a luxury lever-filler pen.

These are the pens of the previous nibs. From top to bottom, the oversizez lever filler with the size 20 nib, the copy of the Parker 51, and the aerometric Honest pen.


Platinum 10 Years, copy of Parker 51 – Sailor Sei-boku

Bruno Taut
May 13th, 2012
etiquetas: Platinum, Presidente, Japón, plumín

5 comments:

ML said...

A very informative article! It makes me appreciate the nibs we use nowadays, yet it also makes me nervous about the rising cost of gold today!

Anonymous said...

totalmente de acuerdo,si echamos un vistazo atras ,valorariamos las joyas que tenemos en cajones olvidados,enhorabuena.
Muchas gracias.

kendo san

Bruno Taut said...

Kendo-san:

Gracias por el comentario y por pasearse por estas páginas.

Sin embargo, estos plumines 10-years, si bien son correctos, no son nada del otro mundo.


IL,

Thanks for your comment and support. Steel nibs can indeed be very good, as those made by Japanese companies in the 1930s and 1940s showed. And they can be a way out to avoid the increasing prices of gold. Now, these "10-years" nibs are just correct, not wonderful.

Thanks again for passing by.

BT

Steve said...

How did you take this pen apart? I have a similiar one and I want to clean the feed but I am scared of breaking it.
Did you need any special tools?
Thanks!

Bruno Taut said...

Excuse, Steve, my delay in replying. Somehow, your comment was overseen and only now I realized you asked me that question.

The only tool I used to disassemble those pens is a wide rubber band for a better grip. The structure is very simple--everything is attached/screwed onto the central ring. So, grab the parts firmly and unscrew.

Thanks for your comment.

Cheers,

BT

Post a Comment

Your comments are welcome and appreciated.