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Anne Frank's fountain pen.


Shangas

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But this is not her pen and this is no historic trace.

Kind Regards

Thomas

 

I know, I'm just wondering off hand.

...The history, culture and sophistication; the rich, aesthetic beauty; the indulgent, ritualistic sensations of unscrewing the cap and filling from a bottle of ink; the ambient scratch of the ink-stained nib on fine paper; A noble instrument, descendant from a line of ever-refined tools, and the luster of writing,
with a charge from over several millennia of continuing the art of recording man's life.

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Hi all,

 

it’s been a few years but wondered if any more information, thoughts or ideas have come to light? One thing I did want to mention, if the pen was burnt, the clip remained and the nib vanished, wouldn’t it help to look at the melting points for material used in 1930-1940 fountain pens? Additionally, what impact mixing celluloid with gold has? 
 

 

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