Typhoo promotional pens & WHSmith pens
#1
Posted 29 April 2013 - 11:07 AM
I've been looking at the Typhoo promotional pens when they come up on Ebay (and restraining myself with difficulty!), and I was wondering who made them, given Typhoo was a tea company, and I can't imagine they had a side-factory turning out fountain pens.
I understand there were a lot of "no name" pen manufacturers around, but also that the bigger pen companies would make pens to be branded with other names.
I also have a WH Smith cap knocking about (that came on a Sheaffer) and wondered similar, that although WH Smith was (and is) a stationery seller, I'd have thought they'd just rebrand another company's pens rather than make their own.
So - does anyone have any ideas? Or pointers for where I might start to research this?
best wishes all
Robin
#2
Posted 29 April 2013 - 11:17 AM
Hi all,
I've been looking at the Typhoo promotional pens when they come up on Ebay (and restraining myself with difficulty!), and I was wondering who made them, given Typhoo was a tea company, and I can't imagine they had a side-factory turning out fountain pens.
I understand there were a lot of "no name" pen manufacturers around, but also that the bigger pen companies would make pens to be branded with other names.
I also have a WH Smith cap knocking about (that came on a Sheaffer) and wondered similar, that although WH Smith was (and is) a stationery seller, I'd have thought they'd just rebrand another company's pens rather than make their own.
So - does anyone have any ideas? Or pointers for where I might start to research this?
best wishes all
Robin
Ty Phoo pens were made under contract by various makers at various times, primarily Summit / Lang and possibly Wyvern. WH Smith pens were often made by CS and also Burnham although there were others. I'm sure there are people on this board with far greater knowledge of these than me.
#3
Posted 29 April 2013 - 11:35 AM
#4
Posted 29 April 2013 - 11:50 AM
Hi all,
I've been looking at the Typhoo promotional pens when they come up on Ebay (and restraining myself with difficulty!), and I was wondering who made them, given Typhoo was a tea company, and I can't imagine they had a side-factory turning out fountain pens.
I understand there were a lot of "no name" pen manufacturers around, but also that the bigger pen companies would make pens to be branded with other names.
I also have a WH Smith cap knocking about (that came on a Sheaffer) and wondered similar, that although WH Smith was (and is) a stationery seller, I'd have thought they'd just rebrand another company's pens rather than make their own.
So - does anyone have any ideas? Or pointers for where I might start to research this?
best wishes all
Robin
Early WHS pens and stylos were made by George Shand up to the time he sold his business in 1914 and either supplied directly to WHS, or via Conway Stewart. George Shand is yet another of my obscure interests, a really important but virtually unknown name in the development of the UK pen industry and I have an interesting (hopefully!) article for the WES Journal underway about his career. Thereafter, they would have been made by CS themselves in their Southwark Street works until they opened the first of their bigger factories in Shoe Lane, c.1921. Their best known model names at this time were the Seal (for gold nibbed pens) and Kingsway (for ink pencils) and CS would have made these well into the 1930s but probably not thereafter. You'll find a few images of these various models in Steve Hull's book 'Fountain Pens for the Millions' (currently available at a special price of £40 from Writetime)!
Andy
#5
Posted 29 April 2013 - 01:36 PM
It's nice to know that even while I harbor a hint of conceit that I know a thing or three about old pens, that still there remain plenty of pens and plenty of pen history of which I've never heard
best regards
David
Email: isaacson@frontiernet.net
#6
Posted 29 April 2013 - 05:16 PM
Ty Phoo pens were made under contract by various makers at various times, primarily Summit / Lang and possibly Wyvern. WH Smith pens were often made by CS and also Burnham although there were others. I'm sure there are people on this board with far greater knowledge of these than me.
Ace! Thank you - that's a good start, it's a lot more than I knew 10 minutes ago
#7
Posted 29 April 2013 - 06:45 PM
If you look at the company history part of my summit website (www.summit.ch944.net) you will see details of the Typhoo bulb-filler as they were advertised on the back of tea cards.
Ty Phoo pens were made under contract by various makers at various times, primarily Summit / Lang and possibly Wyvern. WH Smith pens were often made by CS and also Burnham although there were others. I'm sure there are people on this board with far greater knowledge of these than me.
Ace! Thank you - that's a good start, it's a lot more than I knew 10 minutes ago
I believe this to be an example (note they did not carry the Typhoo name / slogan of the earlier models):
#8
Posted 29 April 2013 - 06:50 PM
I understand this pen to be a WHS syringe filler made for WHS by Shand. Below this I have added a shot of a large WHS advertising board that shows their link with the Seal Pen:
Hi all,
I've been looking at the Typhoo promotional pens when they come up on Ebay (and restraining myself with difficulty!), and I was wondering who made them, given Typhoo was a tea company, and I can't imagine they had a side-factory turning out fountain pens.
I understand there were a lot of "no name" pen manufacturers around, but also that the bigger pen companies would make pens to be branded with other names.
I also have a WH Smith cap knocking about (that came on a Sheaffer) and wondered similar, that although WH Smith was (and is) a stationery seller, I'd have thought they'd just rebrand another company's pens rather than make their own.
So - does anyone have any ideas? Or pointers for where I might start to research this?
best wishes all
Robin
Early WHS pens and stylos were made by George Shand up to the time he sold his business in 1914 and either supplied directly to WHS, or via Conway Stewart. George Shand is yet another of my obscure interests, a really important but virtually unknown name in the development of the UK pen industry and I have an interesting (hopefully!) article for the WES Journal underway about his career. Thereafter, they would have been made by CS themselves in their Southwark Street works until they opened the first of their bigger factories in Shoe Lane, c.1921. Their best known model names at this time were the Seal (for gold nibbed pens) and Kingsway (for ink pencils) and CS would have made these well into the 1930s but probably not thereafter. You'll find a few images of these various models in Steve Hull's book 'Fountain Pens for the Millions' (currently available at a special price of £40 from Writetime)!
Andy
#9
Posted 29 April 2013 - 08:05 PM
The tiny pen is also a Shand, an absolute little poppet of a syringe filler but not a WHS.
The Seal poster is great, a recent ebay purchase I think? I was very tempted too when I saw it. Note the Kingsway address at the bottom giving the name to their Kingsway ink pen.
Andy
#10
Posted 29 April 2013 - 09:05 PM
Seriously, the breadth of knowledge on here is fantastic! Thanks so much for all the information.
Best wishes all
Robin
#11
#12
#13
Posted 01 May 2013 - 09:22 PM
Paul's pen is certainly a Shand design, you can tell primarily by the plunger finial. I have a nice example as well, with a leaflet but no box unfortunately. The slightly earlier WHS Shand design is as the top one on the picture below, though this particular example is not marked, in any case the same design was produced for many different customers.
The tiny pen is also a Shand, an absolute little poppet of a syringe filler but not a WHS.
The Seal poster is great, a recent ebay purchase I think? I was very tempted too when I saw it. Note the Kingsway address at the bottom giving the name to their Kingsway ink pen.
Andy
I might as well chance my luck here by saying I would also have a very charming little poppet, except mine has a significant chip out of the cap rim.
If anyone has a spare tiny cap knocking about please get in touch
#14
Posted 02 May 2013 - 07:11 AM
I might as well chance my luck here by saying I would also have a very charming little poppet, except mine has a significant chip out of the cap rim.
If anyone has a spare tiny cap knocking about please get in touch
Actually, I have to 'fess up here to say the cap on mine also has a split (though no missing material) and needs to be handled with care! So I have no spare, unfortunately.
I also have an identically styled eyedropper that is even smaller, about two thirds the length and slimmer (5.9mm as opposed to 6.7mm barrel diameter). I'd like to think that is a Shand as well - pens as small as these surely must have only been made for novelty value and to prove how adept the manufacturer was. Strangely the cap on that is fully intact, though such a tight fit that I won't risk putting it fully on any more.
Andy
#15
Posted 02 May 2013 - 11:54 AM
For reference purposes, here are the backs of some Ty phoo tea cards, showing a few different and later models ~
and an earlier mottled version ~
Thank you all for the background.
Phil
The third pen on the Typhoo cards looks more like a Mentmore product to me than Langs, from its small nib and the clip.
#16
Posted 02 May 2013 - 04:48 PM
"The third pen on the Typhoo cards looks more like a Mentmore product to me than Langs, from its small nib and the clip"
How novel it is to be debating Summit / Lang items on an international platform
I would have agreed with your observation regarding the last of the three pens, but I had this niggling recollection of having seen the same clip on a Summit product.
My memory was (unusually for once) correct - The picture below is of The Slik pencil, the model name that was used initially for what eventually became the Auto-Vac. I imagine this is probably slightly pre-dates the pens shown on the card, and hence a reasonable assumption would be they were using up surplus old stock on the cheaper advertised pen:
#17
Posted 04 May 2013 - 10:47 AM
Regards, Peter.
Down at Brooklands on Monday for the Emergency Services Day show. Come and see the Bantam on show! I use it for emergency deliveries of blood.
#20
Posted 03 July 2013 - 09:26 PM
The interesting part of this picture is the boxed lever - atypical of CS but not unknown in their own brand pens of the mid 1920s, probably before the introduction of their locking lever system in 1925. Still likely to be of CS manufacture at this time?Hi liapuyat that looks like a nice example.
I think these checker pattern models came with barrels of noticeably varying length, with every other part seeming to be pretty standard.
Andy
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