Ink.
When I started school in the 1950s, we were taught to write with an implement that had not changed since Victorian times.
The ‘dipping pen’ was dipped into inkwells built into the school desks.
Someone had to be the ‘Ink monitor’, and I volunteered for the job. I had to go around with a container of ink and a metal funnel, filling up each desk inkwell before the lesson began. I liked the smell of the ink, and enjoyed trying to fill the inkwells without the ink overflowing onto the desk. Writing with those pens was not easy. Blots were an issue, and many shirt cuffs and wrists became badly stained with the ink during lessons.
It wasn’t too long before the inkwells were removed, and we were expected to supply our own pens and ink. My parents bought me a ‘lever action’ fountain pen, which sucked the ink up into a rubber tube concealed inside.
Bottles of ink would be carried in our satchels, always very tightly closed to prevent a disastrous spillage that could ruin everything inside.
Then ballpoint pens came along, and ink-pens became a thing of the past before I finished school. But I retained my love for writing with a pen, and continued to send personal letters written this way until just two years ago, when a wrist injury made it difficult for me to hold a pen again.
This was so great and made me happy to read. I love things of the 1950’s era, and have been using a fountain pen for about a year now. I have an ink pen with a bottle of ink too, which I adore. It’s amazing how something so simplistic, can be so meaningful and special. I’ve always been a fan of written letters, over typed. So much more unique, requiring so much more thought and effort. Thank you for this. Happy to have found you. ❤
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Thanks for your kind words, Keziah. I am very pleased to hear that you are using a real pen, and a bottle of ink. Keep the tradition alive. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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My dad has always written with a fountain pen and I remember the ritual of him filling pens very carefully.
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There was someting ritualistic about it indeed. I also found that tradition and nostalgia very comforting.
Best wishes, Pete.
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We had the same desks, but the inkwells had not been used in years. I was fascinated and wondered what it would have been like. I think it is very cool that you were an ink monitor. Only the wealthy kids had the pens that sucked up the ink. That would have been fun.
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We were not wealthy, and my ink-sucking pen wasn’t quite as grand as the one in the photo, Jennie. But I did love my pens. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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Do you remember the ones with the ink cartridge that looked like a small plastic cylinder? I loved mine, and wish I had had an ink sucking one. Best to you, Pete.
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Yes, I had a cartridge pen. In fact, the most expensive pen I still own (it was a gift) uses cartidges.
Best wishes, Pete.
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Very cool!
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Ahhhhh memories I love writing with an ink pen but I also remember the stained finger, blots, and cuffs and being told not to press too hard …A post filled with memories…Thank you, Pete 🙂 x
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Yes, pressing too hard, splitting or bending the nibs! 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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This is what i would call a part of the good old time. I am sorry for your wrist injury. Handwriting is always something special, and calligraphy is something i would love knowing to do. Michael
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Me too. Thanks, Michael.
Best wishes, Pete.
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:-))
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❤ this!
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Glad to hear that, dear Lara.
Best wishes, Pete. x
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Primary school was pens with cartridges, but we were all ballpoint by the time I went to secondary school. The desks were great, I’d love to find one now, with its carved in history 🙂
Even up North. I remember ‘we’ dumped a bottle of Quink in someones swimming pool on mischief night, back in the days when if was just trick, none of this trick or treat business 🙂
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You northerners know how to vandalise! You can still buy desks like that on Ebay.
Cheers, Pete.
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Well, a swimming pool, up North, what did they expect 🙂
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I hope it wasn’t an open-air one. It’s grim up there!
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I love ink too. My father used to have bottles for blue and blue-grey. He never gave us a bottle to carry to school because he knew of my capability to break iron, if I want. Glass bottle never stood a chance. Instead we had many pens each. And extra nibs! 😁 ballpoint pens are convenient but the effect is not the same.
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Yes, nothing compares to a letter written carefully using a fountain pen, Shaily. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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Now that’s a bit of history! I love the details. Nothing like that in the States. I think students went with pencils. I’ve never heard of anyone from other generations using ink and pen.
I think it’s great! Go ink!
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Thanks, Cindy. We used pencils for drawing, but it was always ink-pens for writing, until I was 15.
Best wishes, Pete. xx
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I used to really mess-up using an ink well. (or should I say – I MADE a mess). 😣
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I remember dripping ink all over an almost-finished essay. Luckily, the teacher didn’t make me do it all again. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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Ink pens and don’t forget ink blotters. I remember when ballpoint pens first came out, they cost an arm and leg and one of the ‘selling points’ was they could write under water.
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I had a blotter pad at home, but we were not issued with them at school, Don. They would have been a good idea, consdiering what a mess we made. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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I never used an inkwell but I can only imagine I would have made a mess of it! We always used pencils in grade school and I still prefer them for the eraser! 🙂
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We had coloured pencils for drawing, but we had to use a pen for writing. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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Ballpoint pens were widely available by the time I started kindergarten in 1970, but I’ve always had a love for the old style.
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Ah, you are still a youngster, Kim. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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😁
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I loved pulling the lever and pulling the ink into the pen. Cartridge pens were much neater but not as much fun.
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I agree. Though they were a lots less mess, and you could throw the empty cartridges at the back of some kid’s head! 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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I never would have done that, Pete!
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Terrific bit of nostalgia, Pete…thanks for sharing!
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I still miss using my pen, John. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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Apparently, dipping pens are not the same as fountain pens.
From Wikipedia: “A fountain pen is a writing instrument which uses a metal nib to apply a water-based ink to paper. It is distinguished from earlier dip pens by using an internal reservoir to hold ink, eliminating the need to repeatedly dip the pen in an inkwell during use.”
In other words, a fountain pen uses ink-arcerated ink. A dipping pen uses ink that has never seen a pen-itentiary.
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David, you worked hard on that one! 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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I remember those desks with the inkwells and the pen that sucked up ink. Happy days.
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Glad to give you some happy memories, Stevie.
Best wishes, Pete.
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We still had the holes fo the inkwells in our desks, but no inkwells in them any more. We wrote with a slate pen on a slate. And later with a regular pen or a fountain pen, until ballpoint pens came into use.
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I had a slate in my first year of school. Also chalk and a board. I only moved onto pens when I was 6. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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we didn’t have inkwells in our desks, Pete. my mother was a teacher so i remember those bottles of ink 🙂 i used what we called ‘fountain pen’ for the longest time and i loved it. how amazing that you continued to used them until two years ago. very impressive! 🙂 🙂
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Yes, we call them fountain pens too. Glad to give you some memories, Wilma.
Best wishes, Pete.
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I still have pens like the 1st photo as I did calligraphy for a long time. Still do now and then. 😊
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I can imagine you are good at that. You have the patience, and artistic talent too.
Best wishes, Pete.
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Cheers Pete, I must photograph my efforts someday, you might change your mind! 🤣🤣
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I don’t remember using ‘dip pens’ at school [outside art classes, that is], but I’ve always enjoyed writing with a fountain pen, and still use 2 of differing nib thicknesses for handwriting birthday cards or [the now increasingly less frequently required] cheques; I’m so used to typing now, though, that I have to really concentrate to make my handwriting legible! Cheers, Jon.
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It is easy to ‘forget’ how to write properly, I understand that. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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That brought back memories of inky fingers and blotches.. I have not used a fountain pen in years.. terrific series Pete.. and need to back track..x
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Thanks, Sally. It’s a mixed bag of ‘likes’. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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I remember desks with ink wells but we didn’t use them. I seem to remember we had to write in pencil until the end of primary school. My handwriting has always been rubbish whether with pen or pencil – thank goodness for laptops 🙂
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I could write quite nicely with a fountain pen at one time. Then I moved a neighbour’s stupidly heavy bin away from our side window, and turned my wrist dragging it. Since then, I find it too hard to hold a pen at the angle I need to use it.
Best wishes, Pete.
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I did try with a cartridge fountain pen but it still looked like a drunk spider had staggered across the page. My dad, on the other hand, loved to use a fountain pen but he could also do calligraphy. I obviously didn’t inherit that gene.
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I remember inkwells. Some girls had their braids dipped in them.
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Yes, you had to be careful about who was sitting behind you, Peggy. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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I loved those fountain pens. I used them at school as well, and I always collected the cartridges when they were empty. That said…leaking was inevitable, and that of course has happened to me once or twice. Can’t beat those pens though, they were the ones I loved writing with the most😊
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One of my pens is a cartridge pen. They were certainly less messy. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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I had a similar fountain pen, until the cartridge pens came out, eliminating the need for the bottles of Quink. As you say ink stains were a part of life then. I never had to use ballpoint pens as we weren’t allowed them.
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Ballpoints were allowed during my last two years at school. We could use them, as many famlies in that area couldn’t afford to keep buying fountain pens.
Best wishes, Pete. x
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Great choice! I still write with a fountain pen and a good quality ink…..my collection of pens is in the neighborhood of 200 and at least 12 bottles of ink. chuq
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I still have two top class pens, but I can no longer hold them properly. Glad to hear you are a pen and ink man. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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My favorite is a Monteblanc….and a olive wood custom pen a friend made for me…..chuq
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