Here are some poor pictures of three items from my store box!
The middle Parker is a stainless finish French made Parker with a lovely 18ct 750 solid gold nib. I can't remember where or when I aquired it but more importantlly I can't remember what model it is! The stainless pencil below has the same clip but the gray pearl tassie of the 51/61/65 type The gold plated press button T ball above is also effected by my memory loss!
Will any of you good people take pity on me and identify the trio? Thanks Dave
It has a round smooth section and the nib is all wrong for a 75! Apart from the nib I would suggest a cheaper pen than a 75 I would say definitely not a 75 however someone else suggested that as well on the FPN. I had believed that this pen was produced exclusively for the European market with the 18ct gold nib as the French do not recognise any lower value as true gold! What it is called is what stumps me!
It is indeed a Parker 35 made in Meru for the European market
These are apparently known as the small 75 by some
This one is the Flighter model stainless body 18ct solid gold nib round smooth section with reverse taper reduced tassie to barrel stacked clip screw to cap and was made between 1983 and 1986
As you may gather I have been re-reading the Parker Penography now that my fragile memory has been given a kick up the rump! Thanks all ! I am now looking for a suitable box in the 'Box Box' so that I may sell it before I forget what it is again! Cheers Dave PS anyone know if the figure 3 moulded on the feed is of any significance? [The nib appears medium by UK standards and is smooooooth!] Here is a proper picture on the Parker collector site http://parkercollector.com/bilder_pennor/35/parker_35-collection.jpg
-- Edited by Aislingean on Monday 7th of December 2009 03:22:05 PM
I think the middle pen is a late production Parker 75. These last 75s had round sections without finger grips and while the nibs were the same as the original 75s, the feed/collector was completely different. Instead of the wide band at the end of the section (the nib end) these round sections simply had a very thin gold ring without any graduation marks. I don't think I've ever seen a Parker 35 with an 18K nib, but anything is possible. Late 75 "Flighters" were available with GF clip and trim or CP clip and trim. I have both in my collection.