Skip to main content

A new kid in town - fountain pen maker Kuretake (Japan)

Kuretake Fountain Pens 夢銀河

The famous maker of brush pens in Japan, Kuretake, seems to increase its offering of fountain pens.
Last year, when I saw them on a stationary exhibition, they had only one fountain pen on display. This year on the Mitsukoshi pen show they had already several.  See some pictures below.




A brush pen in the back and a beautiful black fountain pen in front.


A limited edition pen, offered by Takashimaya

Materials: Antler from Nara (Japan) dyed with indigo.
Bock nib

77760 Yen, if you are interested.

LINK















Pictures from the catalogue





































Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Slimming down

Update: I started selling - see my sales pages : In order to sell most of my pens, I first had to made up my mind what I want to keep. May I present here my target collection, the ones to keep. It is a page in progress, there are still many holes in the data. Waldmann Pens Counting from the left, pen 1-4, 7-10 are the same model: the model Precieux (Deep Wide) Lines in Sterling silver. Pen 8-10 are the original model (fountain pen, mechanical pencil and ball-pen). Pen 1-4 are the yellow-gold vermeil version of it (mechanical pencil, rollerball, ball-pen and fountain pen) and pen 7 is the rose-gold vermeil version of the fountain pen. The rose-gold fountain pen has a rose-gold-plated 18k nib. Pen 6 is the same model in steel, coated in black (Waldmann P2000). But it is not a typical steel, it is  a recycled steel from gun barrels recycled by the German police. It is a limited edition, meanwhile sold out. Read more about it here . Unfortunately, the silver model is meanwhile also ou

Pen box - Japanese style

My rotation pens rested in several boxes here and there on my book shelves. I always wanted them to be together in one box. So, I bought one at Yahoo Auctions. It is a wooden box lacquered with urushi, unused, stored hidden for many years in some drawers.  Nice, isn't it. It is an old storage box for writing tools and paper. But to use it as a pen box, there is some protection necessary - otherwise the lacquer will soon suffer.  But such an inset is probably not commercially available. So today, I decided to make one by myself - using Japanese paper "Washi". I chose a paper in which gold and silver flakes are mixed into the fibres. It is quite thick and, additionally, the backside is coated with gold. (This gold and silver is certainly made from aluminium.) I folded the paper that the valley is 15mm broad and the crests are 5mm high. The backside then looks like this. Some adhesive into the crests.  A little bit of persuasion with some clip

Otto Hutt Fountain Pens: Design 06

When I visited Germany recently, I had the chance to buy my first Otto Hutt pen . It is a Limited Edition which was produced for the 250th anniversary of the arrival of the first jewellery and watch factory in 1767 in Pforzheim (Germany). Details of the pen see it's brochure: LINK . It was available with a steel nib or with a 18K gold nib, which o f course, I choose. A gold pen needs a gold nib. I also had the chance to borrow a standard model of this pen, black matte with a steel nib in F for comparative tests.  Design OH left, CdA right The name of this pen is Design 06 - for further information see the homepage at Otto Hutt - Link1 (Design 06 page) and Link 2 (Configurator page).  The pen is cigar-shaped, 14 mm at the belly and 9 mm at both ends. I like this design. I have some highly valued Caran d'Ache pens (modell Geneve from the 1990s) with very similar geometry (see photo left).  Goldpen left, standard right The photo on the right shows the Gol