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Waterman Man 100 Fontainebleau Green Wood


sarmento2k

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Gentleman

 

I've just purchased a Waterman Man 100 Fontainebleau green wood in a local pen & watch dealer in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

 

After some research on the web, its most likely a limited edition made in 1988 or 1987.

 

The first time I inked the pen, the section became stained and using a tissue most of the ink was cleaned but the wood part in contact with the ink, seems do have absorbed some ink.

 

I have some models of Waterman, from the 80&90's and this one attracted me because it's not a classic appearence in terms of standard black color on lacquer or metal finish.

 

The nib is very smooth and the pen even a little bit heavy is well balanced and it a pleasure to write with it.

 

In the store there were two colors available, this green and a blue, and I got this one brand new.

 

I post a high resolution picture of it to try to show the effect of first inking on the section and I confess I never used wood pen and if someone could help with some info about this pen or how to care and maintain a pen like this, I would be thankful.

 

Best regards

 

 

 

 

 

http://www.sarmento.eng.br/fotos/fountain_pen/Man_100_Fontainebleau_green_wood.jpg

 

 

 

 

http://www.sarmento.eng.br/fotos/fountain_pen/Watermam_Man_100_Fontainebleau.jpg

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sarmento Campos
Rio de Janeiro - Brazil
www.sarmento.blog.br
www.sarmento.net.br

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Wow it is a fantastic set!

 

Do you remember any information of the dealer (e.g. contact method)? I have been looking for a blue set for long.

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Congratulations, I find this pen stunning, I do find it strange that the section changed colour; watch out for the common problem for this model of section collar rusting, I would suggest not dunking it in an ink bottle for that reason alone.

 

That case is also stunning.

"The trouble with the world is that the stupid are cocksure and the intelligent are full of doubt."

 

B. Russell

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Many years ago I send one of this pens to Waterman's repair service and ask them to change the stain section. They send it back with a plastic one from the regular Man 100 black pen. :angry: .

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I would just not ink it that way again. if it were plastic or resin I'd say use some simichrome (works great on acrylic sections that stain) but I think you may be screwed.

 

From now on, fill the converter itself and then insert it into the pen. I'd -never- dip wood into ink. I've use ink as a wood stain.

 

It's still a damn good looking pen, and I'd be willing to live with that stain. I just wouldn't make it worse.

Edited by Honeybadgers

Selling a boatload of restored, fairly rare, vintage Japanese gold nib pens, click here to see (more added as I finish restoring them)

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