It’s one of the most common tropes of the Golden Age of Detective Fiction, from the 1880s to the 1950s! It appears in everything from Sherlock Holmes to Peter Wimsey, Poirot to Miss Marple – the vital clue – the incriminating message – the saving grace – written on a sheet of paper, flipped over, and then blotted on a sheet of blotting paper, which the killer, extortionist, blackmailer or other careless desperado – then – conveniently – forgets to dispose of! As Holmes would say: “There’s nothing so important as the study of trifles!”
Since the second half of the 1800s, desk blotters or blotting pads, have been a staple on every well-appointed desktop. Designed to hold a sheet of blotting paper where it was convenient, and handy for keeping spills, stains and marks off of the surface of your – presumably – very beautiful, and expensive desk – desk-blotters served a multitude of purposes: Coaster, food-tray, jotting-pad, blotter, and even a launchpad for the greatest ideas in the world!…the sheet of blotting paper detailing the original design for the “Crystal Palace” is one of the most famous in the world!
I bought this blotter pad at a local antiques store about three years ago for just $10.00. It was in decent shape, but the more I looked at it, the more I realised just how tired, worn out and in need of attention, it really was. The surface of the pad was covered in ring-marks from old drinks and the triangular, leather corner tabs were peeling and lifting from old age and the glue used to adhere it, becoming unstuck.
Fed up with constantly having to glue the damaged tabs back down, over, and over, and over again, I decided to just pull the whole thing apart, and do a proper restoration!
Restoring the Blotting Pad
The first step was to do something about all these ugly marks on the surface of the pad. The actual structure of the pad was in excellent condition, but it wasn’t the prettiest thing to look at. I found some scrap leather in a nice, dark blue colour, and started measuring and stretching and trimming it to the right size. I spread down glue and pressed the leather over the top of the old pad. The leather would make the pad look nicer, it would last longer, and the softness of the leather would provide cushioning for writing – so it didn’t feel like you were trying to carve your name into the desk while writing.
To hide the raw edges of the leather, the next step was to fit in a ribboned border, with some matching blue ribbon. This was easy enough, although it took rather more glue than I had anticipated!
The final step was the hardest: Attaching the blotting paper tabs.
The original tabs were very flimsy – they were literally paper-thin sheets of leather glued and folded around pieces of paper! Something this delicate would be impossible for me to repair, so I decided to cut away all the excess underside paper, leaving me with just the upper leather tabs – the only part which would show.
I found some scrap leather, and using the tabs as stencils, I traced and cut out four identical triangles of leather. I glued the original leather tabs onto their new, leather backing pieces, and then I glued, and nailed, the tabs into the corners of the blotter pad. The pad was more than thick enough to fit the nails, and the corner-tabs would hide the unfinished edges of the ribbon border around the edge of the pad.
I had planned to just glue the tabs down, like they had been originally, but it was soon obvious that the thickness of the blotting paper would simply pull the tabs right up off of the surface of the blotter, and no amount of glue would be strong enough to hold the tabs down. So in the end, I decided that a few, tiny, discrete nails, carefully hammered into the right places, would be ideal. They would be barely noticeable, they’d fit in well, and be so small as to be virtually invisible.
The whole process took less than a day, and the end result was simple, elegant, and robust.
Concluding Remarks
Breathing new life into this battered and obviously well-used blotting pad was much easier than I originally thought it might be. My greatest fear was tearing the original tabs, because of how thin they were, but the whole restoration process was surprisingly easy. I had a choice, when resurfacing the pad, of using brown or blue leather, but since most of the pads I’ve seen were almost always some shade of brown, or other heavy, dark colour, I chose blue so that it would stand out more, and I think the results speak for themselves!
Once I’ve fitted out the blotter with fresh blotting paper, it’ll be ready to grace another desktop for another 100 years!
My ongoing love-affair with fine writing instruments, and desk accessories, was taken to another level this week, when I finally acquired – after many years of indecision – my very first PELIKAN fountain pen!
Pelikan is one of those pen-companies that the populous at large, are not overly familiar with. Everybody has heard of names like Parker, Sheaffer, Waterman, Montblanc, and maybe even brands like Visconti, Pilot, Faber-Castell, Sailor, and Namiki. Pelikan, by comparison, is relatively unknown outside of Europe. Most run-of-the-mill pen-and-paper shops won’t sell Pelikan pens – to find them, you need to visit pen shows, or more high-end pen-and-paper stores which specialise in higher-end or more refined writing instruments.
Despite this relative obscurity, Pelikan enjoys a good reputation among fountain pen collectors for the size, quality and dare I say it – variety – of their pens, which come in all kinds of colours, sizes, stylings, and price-points, from something like a little Pelikan M100, all the way up to an M1000! Passing through the M200, 400, 600, and 800, along the way.
This posting is going to be a review of the first Pelikan pen in my collection, the M800-sized limited edition known as the ‘Stone Garden’.
Why Buy a Pelikan?
Over the last two years or so, I’d been wanting to make a conscious effort of not only increasing, but also upgrading, my overall collection of antique, vintage, and modern fountain pens. To this end, I’d started selling off most of my lower-end, or otherwise unused fountain pens, writing accessories and unused inks to friends, and other collectors.
It was around this time that I started looking at new pens that I might want to buy. I’d had enough of American and British pens, such as Parker, Waterman, Swan, etc, and turned my sights towards Europe. Europe has a very rich history and culture of pen manufacture, and I wanted to add a sampling of this culture to my collection.
In Europe, the main pen-manufacturing countries are Italy, France, Germany, and Switzerland – yes, Switzerland! Don’t forget that Caran d’Ache is based in Switzerland!
Well. I already had a Visconti…and a Caran d’Ache…and I’d had my fill of Montblancs…and pens from other manufacturers seemed too far outside of my price-range for the time-being. Because of this, I turned my attention to – PELIKAN!
I had discounted adding a Pelikan to my collection for many years because of a sort of love-hate relationship that I had with them. Any pens which I could afford were too similar in styling to pens which I already had. Any pens which were different from what I had, were too expensive to afford! It really was a case of six-of-one and half-a-dozen of the other! So in the end, I turned away and put it all on hiatus.
That changed last year, when I found out that Pelikan had released the new “Stresemann”-style, to their famous “Souveran” line.
For those who don’t know – “Stresemann” is a reference to the early 20th century German politician, Gustav Stresemann, who was famous for wearing a stroller suit with a pair of pinstriped black and grey trousers. To pay homage to Stresemann’s distinctive style, the new pen was designed to be black, with silver trim and medium grey stripes and a shiny, white gold nib – very different from the usual monochrome offerings made by Pelikan, such as black, blue, green, red…usually in quite bright, vibrant colours.
Initially, I had my heart set on getting a Pelikan Stresemann in Pelikan’s largest, M1000-size, and started price-hunting. I wanted a Pelikan that didn’t look like all the other damn Pelikans that I’d seen, and the Stresemann seemed to be the best bet! That is…until I saw the price. Naturally, being almost brand-new, it was extremely expensive! So I started looking at something a bit more affordable – a different model, perhaps. Or a different size?
That was when I stumbled across a curiosity of a pen that I found on the “Available Stock” page of a local online pen-and-stationery retailer. It was a Pelikan, alright – but not as I knew it! The cap was a rich, navy blue. The blind-cap was navy blue. Even the section was navy blue!
When every single Pelikan pen I’d ever seen in my life had contrasting black, you can bet that the contrasting navy blue certainly stood out! On top of that, the main area of the pen’s barrel was not just boring old stripes of blue, or red, or green…or even the grey of the Stresemann – oh no! This was much more interesting! It was a marbled, mottled, speckled brown and blue of different shades, all mingled up together, punctuated here and there by little specks of black!
This was something which looked so incredibly different from every other Pelikan pen that I’d ever seen, that I was immediately drawn to it! I was intrigued, fascinated, amazed! It really was a case of love at first sight!
Brown and dark blue, and dark blue and gold, are three colours that all go together beautifully, and here they were, all combined together into a single entity! I knew at once that this was the pen for me, and that I absolutely had to get my hands on one by any means necessary! I always told myself that if I did ever get a Pelikan, then it had to be one which stood out – and boy howdy, did this one ever!
Und so!The hunt begins!
Acquiring the Desired Pen…
I don’t believe in any form of God, higher-power, angels…guardian or otherwise…wizards, pixies, elves, halflings or little people…but for some reason, I always seem to be able to find the best deals on almost anything that I’m looking for, when it comes to adding things to my collection. I guess I’m just obscenely lucky…or patient!
I trawled several online sellers of fountain pens to try and find the best deal for this pen, both locally, and internationally. Every seller which I came across was selling the pen for an absolutely insane price. $800-$1,000+ was the most common price-range that I found…and that didn’t include international shipping and any taxes or insurance that went on top of it! Add it all up and even at the cheapest level, the pen would still cost $1,000!…not a price I was willing to pay! Especially for something that I was going to be buying secondhand – which I would almost certainly have to do, since the pen hasn’t been manufactured for two years!
A conversation with a friend – if she’s reading this, she knows who she is – hey!! – directed my search to a fellow member of a local pen collector’s group on Facebook. He had two such pens for sale! He’d already sold one, and by sheer happenstance, I’d contacted him just at the time when he was thinking of selling the second one!
His price was significantly cheaper than anything that I’d seen anywhere else, even with the cost of postage thrown in! It took me about a week to make up my mind to buy the pen, and it took less than a week for it to be delivered! The benefits of finding a local seller!
The Features of the Stone Garden Pelikan
The Pelikan Stone Garden L.E. fountain pen is a special edition, a variation on the more common Pelikan Souveran M800 line, upon which it is based. As such, it shares all the common characteristics with the rest of the M800, and larger M1000 line from Pelikan.
Piston-Fill Mechanism
One of the reasons why I started getting interested in Pelikan pens is because, much like their sibling, Montblanc (you know, the younger brother who was always hotter, cuter, more popular at parties, and more famous among all your friends…!), large-sized Pelikan pens are all piston-fillers. This means that they have an internal mechanism that draws ink up inside the pen, using a screw-actuated piston-mechanism inside the barrel, operated by the knob (or “blind cap”, to give it its proper terminology) at the back end of the barrel.
For those who might not be aware of this – Pelikan actually invented the piston-fill fountain pen! So if piston-fillers are your thing, then you have Pelikan to thank for their existence!
The piston-filler on the Stone Garden is EXTREMELY smooth. It requires no effort to fill or empty the pen, and exactly five turns of the blind-cap is all it takes to complete either operation with no issues at all.
Another feature of the M800 and M1000-series of Pelikan piston-fillers is that these pens, unlike the lower-grade, 600, 400, 200 etc, series, come with a brass piston-filling mechanism…as opposed to the cheaper, and less robust plastic mechanisms used in Pelikan’s other pens.
Of course, that’s not to say that the plastic piston-mechanism aren’t as good, but when you’re paying for something like a limited edition collectors’ piece, you want a filling mechanism that’ll last as long as the rest of the pen does!
Removable Nib-Unit
Another feature of the M800 series (and indeed, all Pelikan pens) is the ability for Pelikan nibs to be swapped out for other nibs! This is easily done by gripping the nib and feed together in your fingers, and carefully unscrewing the whole section. The threaded feed and collar, with the nib included, then simply slides out once it has been unscrewed the appropriate number of times.
To change nibs (for writing preferences, or to replace a broken or damaged nib), simply screw the replacement nib-unit back into the pen! Hey presto! Of course, it has to be a nib-unit from an identically-sized pen! An M1000 nib won’t fit into an M800, and M600 won’t fit into an M1000, and so-on. Be sure you know the size of your pen and be very specific when searching, or asking for, a replacement!
I swapped out the nib in my Stone Garden from a Broad Italic down to a Fine, simply because European nib-sizes are quite generous and juicy, and I wanted something that wasn’t too wet that would flood my writing, bleed through the paper, and feather across the page during one of my long-haul writing marathons!
Another fantastic benefit of the removable nib-unit is that it makes the pen extremely easy to clean! You can literally unscrew the nib and feed, pull it out, pour out all the ink, wash everything out incredibly thoroughly – and then simply screw it back together again!
Ink-Window – Or Lack Thereof…
This is, probably, the only strike that I have against the Pelikan M800 Stone Garden – the lack of an ink-window, a feature that almost all regular Pelikan pens have…but which this limited edition, owing to its method of construction, does not.
The ‘Ink Window’ is the name given to the transparent midsection of the barrel, just above the section. You often find it on piston-filling pens, and it’s a convenient way of telling how much ink is left inside your pen. On Montblanc and Pelikan pens, the ink windows are discretely worked into the decorations and body of the pen barrel, which means that they can perform their functions without sticking out like a sore thumb.
While this pen does not have an ink-window, somehow, I think it looks better without it. An ink-window would disrupt the nice blue-brown contrast between the section, barrel and blind-cap at the end of the pen.
The Pelikan Stone Garden: First Impressions.
The pen is very neatly presented, and packaged, in a cardboard “PELIKAN” box, and wrapped in a white, leatherette sheath held shut by a dark red elastic band with a red disc on it. The whole design gives the impression of a scroll tied up with ribbon and held shut with a seal of red wax, with the pen nestled neatly inside. It’s a big departure from how many other pen manufacturers package their merchandise, and it really stands out!
The pen is light, and comfortable to use. It’s medium-sized and is similar in length, girth and weight, to the Montblanc 146 ‘Le Grand’ model. The section threads allow the cap to be removed easily and cleanly, without exerting too much force or having to twist endlessly to find the end of the thread. Three quarters of a full turn is enough to remove the cap.
The clip on the cap is flexible, but strong, and the filling mechanism is extremely smooth and easy to use. The cap may be posted on the end of the barrel, and sits very securely, with no wobbling or loosening over time, while you write. The gold-trimmed cap-band reads: “PELIKAN SOUVERAN GERMANY”, referring, of course, to the company name, the product line, and the country of origin.
The Pelikan Stone Garden: Writing Experience.
As with most of Pelikan’s higher-grade fountain pens, the Stone Garden comes complete with an 18kt two-tone nib with decorative looping, and the “Pelikan and Chick” logo set in yellow gold. The nib is marked “18c – 750”.
The pen wrote wonderfully smoothly, with a good, strong, consistent line, most definitely on the ‘wetter’ side of the spectrum – a characteristic of European pens, which always seem to be more generous in their ink-flow. There was no skipping, hard starting or any other issues that sometimes plague other pens, and first, and subsequent impressions, continue to be very favourable.
Pelikan Stone Garden: Size, Weight, Balance, Feel.
The pen felt wonderfully light in the hand, but not unsubstantial, or otherwise indicative of being poorly made. It’s definitely an excellent pen for substantial writing, involving pages and pages of longhand cursive.
Even with the cap posted, the pen is well-balanced, and there’s no sensation that posting the cap might encourage the nib to lift away from the paper. The pen is fairly large, but comfortable to hold in the hand, without the fingers becoming too crowded around the section. All in all, a very pleasant writer.
Concluding Remarks
All in all, I think the Pelikan Stone Garden is an excellent pen, well worth any amount of money that someone might spend on it. It’s attractive, comfortable, has a large ink capacity, and solid inkflow. The pen’s filling mechanism is smooth and easily operated.
The unusual colour choices for the cap, section, blind-cap and barrel make the pen unique, and it stands out from the crowd, without being tacky, conspicuous, loud, or excessively showy.
The pen fills and empties easily, is very simple to clean and maintain, and all up, makes for a very pleasant writing experience. All up, the Pelikan M800 ‘Stone Garden’ is a worthy addition to any serious collection of fine writing instruments.