Hello to my future friends! I was a bit shocked by the FP frenzy on ebay and have been delighted to find such a larger cohesive community of people who seem to be as nuts as I am about fountain pens.... perhaps even more so, from what I have been reading in here! Ahhhh, I feel like I am home.
Frank & DWL, Thanks for the kind welcome. My collecting /using tastes ..... I guess some would say I have no taste as yet. I am actually a woodworker.. made the slimline pens. That gave way to kit FPs and that reminded me of this neat looking fountain pen my dad had when I was a kid. It was an odd light blue, the nib was shrouded in a slanted plastic.... yep, a Parker 51. I learned that thanks to ebay. I bought some old junker pens and a couple of restored "vintage" pens. I have a motley assortment of Esterbrooks, Wearevers, Parkers, Majestics..... and an odd duck that I have discovered is an old P24 Conklin Crescent in pretty darned pristine shape (from an antique shop) that I returned to working condition (I hesitate to call it restored since it is a bit lusterless in the BCHR department) but it looks nice and writes surprisingly well( to me anyway). I even had a bottle of Higgins India Ink to use! Ha! I heard that groan all the way from here! Fortunately I have gleaned enough sense from these forums to know better than to use that stuff so I ordered a bottle of Quink. OK, not fancy or perhaps even "stylish" but it works. I think that my collecting tastes are pretty much inclined toward vintage stuff and custom pens although I am very much a neophite and cannot fathom the rationality of a $1000+ pen. My finances simply would not allow me to seriously entertain such a purchase at this point. , So... Cheap and kinda old, like me. My using tastes are slightly egocentric.... I began chronicaling my life for posterity since I know so little about my grandparents or any generation before them, I decided to "buy my great grand kids a drink" in the form of a very informal autobiography in personal letter form..... blah, blah, blah..... it is MY excuse for copious amounts of writing with a FP. Seems everybody here has one. I have 18 sample bottles of Noodlers on order, as well as various sizes of bladders (sacs), J-bars, shellac, section pliers, nibs ... you know where I am headed with this. I have returned 18 pens to functionality...some not so pretty and one in particular that is a true "Frankenstein" that incorporates pieces of foreign species.... couldnt figure out how to resore an Esterbrook with a broken piston...I removed the piston and fashioned a "bayonet" to the rear of the section to accept cartidge or converter. It is truly hideous, but it works. Since then I have spent hours each day reading, researching, locating suppliers, copying catalog posts for ID purposes and basically succumbing to my new addiction. I am also a lapidary..... this means that for a couple of these old low end pens there are new feeds in their futures , made of colorless sapphire. My idea of FP "tuition". I have the means and machinery to do it, we'll see how well it works. I can envision a Bexley sacrificed to harvest the section, cap clip and nib to be resurrected in a barrel and cap made from Australian Red Mallee Burl, double jeweled with medium blue sapphires and a matching sapphire feed. I am anxious to try that. Perhaps not a Bexley..who knows, there's time to find an "organ donor". More than ya really wanted to know eh? lol
Looking forward to seeing your custom work! The Estie "Piston" sounds like the Safari model that had a short sac inside. This was because that piston took up so much space! Maybe you can fashion a blind cap to cover up the cartridge!
Regards, Frank
__________________
"When, in the course of writing events, it becomes self-evident that all pens are not created equal" (Federalist Frank)
We sell quality, known brands at reasonable prices!!