A beautiful Swan!
#1
Posted 23 June 2012 - 04:33 AM
05ring5.jpg 22.72KB 75 downloads
#2
Posted 23 June 2012 - 06:35 AM
Just dreaming of a silver ringtop/baby/ minicollection. By the looks of things, i just might have a dozen by years end. But anyways i just stumbled upon this magnificent Swan with an aluminum cap. I want to know where i can find one, and what ive gotta pay.
05ring5.jpg 22.72KB 75 downloads
Hi Brandon,
It's a frankenpen.
regards
david
Email: isaacson@frontiernet.net
#3
Posted 23 June 2012 - 07:06 AM
Just dreaming of a silver ringtop/baby/ minicollection. By the looks of things, i just might have a dozen by years end. But anyways i just stumbled upon this magnificent Swan with an aluminum cap. I want to know where i can find one, and what ive gotta pay.
05ring5.jpg 22.72KB 75 downloads
Hi Brandon,
It's a frankenpen.
regards
david
How have you came to that conclusion?
http://www.stylophil...5-05/05ring.htm
#4
Posted 23 June 2012 - 07:19 AM
How have you came to that conclusion?
http://www.stylophil...5-05/05ring.htm
Always happy to keep open mind. I've been wrong before. I do miss Riepl's photography, never mind the mag itself, to which I had contributed.
Guess the question is did Bill find a proper pen or a mix. The blue barrel with a metal cap on a pen from that era viscerally strikes me as odd, though odd pens did happen. The top band on the cap sort of matching the barrel lends possibility at least of originality. Suppose I can check the Mabie book, if i can find it after my move. I guess one question to ask is where Bill came up with that critter.
regards
d
Email: isaacson@frontiernet.net
#8
Posted 24 June 2012 - 04:49 AM
He noted
date the pen late 20's early 30's... even at the turn of the century, aluminum wasn't considered a precious metal anymore. It's an urban legend. The aluminum parkers, even those, that the old timers used to say that they were made in a time aluminum was considered precious metal, is false.
I still think it's a frankenpen, but the real experts would have to sound off. The band does give a sense of the cap being original to the pen
Email: isaacson@frontiernet.net
#9
Posted 24 June 2012 - 04:52 AM
While Rick doesn't have a huge Mabie focus, he does play with many of the smaller brands.
He noted
date the pen late 20's early 30's... even at the turn of the century, aluminum wasn't considered a precious metal anymore. It's an urban legend. The aluminum parkers, even those, that the old timers used to say that they were made in a time aluminum was considered precious metal, is false.
I still think it's a frankenpen, but the real experts would have to sound off. The band does give a sense of the cap being original to the pen
Rick?
#10
Posted 24 June 2012 - 04:57 AM
Rick?
Full name in his quote
d
Email: isaacson@frontiernet.net
#12
Posted 01 July 2012 - 11:40 PM
The barrel is more likely than not English production, not NYC. In discussion of this pen in another thread David Moak and his book were mentioned. His book does not deal with UK production, and I'm not sure if he is as familiar with English Swans as he is with US models -- for the former, I'd consult with one of the UK experts first.
As noted by others, aluminum was most certainly NOT a precious metal at the time the pen was made.
#13
Posted 02 July 2012 - 12:28 AM
The cap is assembled. The pen is not kosher.
The barrel is more likely than not English production, not NYC. In discussion of this pen in another thread David Moak and his book were mentioned. His book does not deal with UK production, and I'm not sure if he is as familiar with English Swans as he is with US models -- for the former, I'd consult with one of the UK experts first.
As noted by others, aluminum was most certainly NOT a precious metal at the time the pen was made.
Please expand on this. In better terms it a frankenpen?
#16
Posted 02 July 2012 - 06:44 AM
Gotcha,
What swan would have a cap like that? And barrel...
Hi Brandon,
I'd expect the cap on the blue pen to pretty well match the blue barrel.
I don't know any Swan that would have that cap. To paraphrase another David, the cap looks unoriginal, not just mixed in from otnerh pen.
Blue Swans are known.
regards
david
Email: isaacson@frontiernet.net
#17
Posted 02 July 2012 - 07:59 AM
Edited by Deb, 02 July 2012 - 08:02 AM.
#18
Posted 02 July 2012 - 03:22 PM
There's no mention of the nib size but the pen looks moderately thick, so perhaps one of the larger sizes. For the rest, I'd go with David Nishimura's analysis, that the crown of the cap has been re-used, so the pen originally would have had three bands as it does now. It's blue marble, so the original pen would have been, guessing at the nib size, a 430/52, a late twenties/early thirties pen.
Deb,
You were write () on the money. I didn't even know that was a numbering system until i saw this listing
http://cgi.ebay.com/...cvip=true&rt=nc
Looks like the same pen, but without the aluminum cap.
#19
Posted 02 July 2012 - 04:25 PM
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