But there is catch—the pen is not entirely Kawakubo’s. The base is an old Japanese pen (I guess from around 1955); eyedropper with shut-off valve, in ebonite, and with a 14 K gold nib. And then –and only then— the work of Mr. Kawabuko's started.
First, fixing the issues most old pens have. In particular, fixing the seal of the shut-off valve, a typical problem found in Japanese eyedroppers.
Second, polishing the gold nib to remove all previous engravings.
Third, retipping the nib and cutting it to a variable point (what Sailor calls a “zoom” nib).
Fourth, creating a maki-e decoration on cap and barrel. The pattern of this pen is called tanzaku, which are poem cards and strips used in a number of Japanese rituals.
These are the dimensions of the pen:
- Length closed: 129 mm
- Length open: 113 mm
- Length posted: 159 mm
- Diameter: 12 mm
- Weight: 16.0 g (dry)
The result is truly interesting and makes a very nice writer. Now, is this a form of pen making or just a form of tunning a pen? Anonymizing it by polishing the nib to a blank slate, so to speak, makes me uncomfortable. Was that really needed?
My thanks to Mr. Sekinen.
Pilot Vpen, M nib – Pilot Blue (refilled)
Bruno Taut
In transit, November 13th, 2013
etiquetas: evento, nibmeister Kawakubo
Bruno Taut
In transit, November 13th, 2013
etiquetas: evento, nibmeister Kawakubo