The war period in Japan is a lot longer than in Europe and in America, and in fact dating its starting point is difficult and controversial. Regarding pens, on the years 1932 and 1938 –well before the beginning of the war in Europe— some restrictions were imposed on the production of consumer goods.
On 1932, the first restrictions on the use of gold were enacted. Gold nibs became rarer in the domestic market and pen companies manufactured gold nibs with lower-grade gold.
1938 meant the total embargo in the use of the noble metal and no gold nibs were manufactured until well after the end of the war. This is the golden era of the so-called “shiro nibs” (white nibs) made of stainless steel.
The following unit is an interesting example of a war-time pen in Japan. It is a Pilot with a size 2 nib made, of course, of stainless steel. The filling system is a lever filler. The pen is made of hard rubber.
The brand name is written on three different places—the clip, the nib, and the barrel. The later is partially hidden by the original sticker, where the price –JPY 3.48— is marked. The brand logo, though, is visible and shows the N (after Namiki) encircled by the lifebuoy, but the company name, as engraved, is “Pilot Pen Mfg. Co.”, thus certifying this pen had been manufactured after 1938.
The construction quality is not great, as could be expected in a product made during those hard times.
These are its dimensions:
- Length closed: 123 mm
- Length open: 114 mm
- Length posted: 156 mm
- Diameter: 12 mm
- Weight (dry): 12.7 g
That was a war time pen, just like some Pelikan 100—but a lot less known.
A war time Pelikan 100. Note the absence of any ring on the cap, and the steel nib. Photo courtesy of Foro de Estilográficas member Antolín.
My thanks to Mr. Sunami and to Foro de Estilográficas member Antolín.
Romillo Nervión – Pilot Blue
Bruno Taut
Madrid, December 2nd 2014
labels: Pilot, Pelikan, plumín
Bruno Taut
Madrid, December 2nd 2014
labels: Pilot, Pelikan, plumín