Pentrace is happy to welcome Nakaya Fountain Pen Co as a new sponsor.
Nakaya pens have been a popular topic on Pentrace since introduced a
few years ago by Russ Stutler on Pentrace
East.
The Nakaya theme is “For Your Hand Only” as Nakaya produces
hand made pens from hand shaping of hard rubber to decoration and the
final shaping of the nib choice exactly to the owner’s writing hand.
More than a few Pentracers have actually visited Nakaya offices in Tokyo,
Japan in their travels and provided us with their interesting reports.
Pentrace appreciates the support from Mr. Toshiya Nakata, President of
Nakaya and we look forward to their announcements of their newest products.
Visit the reports and articles listed below to see the Nakaya team
at home and while visiting the Chicago and Washington, DC Pen Show
in recent years.
The Nakaya Team includes Mr. Sadao Watanabe, Nib Master, Mr. Kohsuke
Matsubara, Lathe Master hand making hard rubber pens and Mr. Shinichi
Yoshida is Product Designer who creates new pens and accessories.
Nakaya Fountain Pen Co.
http://www.nakaya.org/eindex.html
Nakaya visit the 2004 Chicago Pen Show Chicago Pen Show
http://www.pentrace.net/penbase/Data_Returns/full_article.asp?id=444
Snooping around the Nakaya Fountain Pen Company (and spying out new products)
Written by Russ Stutler October 2003
http://www.pentrace.net/east/nakaya_visit_2/index.html
A Visit to the
Nakaya Fountain Pen Company
Written by Russ Stutler July, 2003
http://www.pentrace.net/east/nakaya_visit/index.html
My Big Adventure with a Nakaya Fountain Pen
Written by Russ Stutler
http://www.pentrace.net/east/nakaya/index.html
A visit with two Japanese maki-e artists
Photos by Russ Stutler and Nahomi Noritsuke
Article by Russ Stutler
http://www.pentrace.net/penbase/Data_Returns/full_article.asp?ID=194
A Special Product from the Urushi Tree
By Fred Whitlock
http://www.pentrace.net/penbase/Data_Returns/full_article.asp?id=354
The Nakaya Urushi Wajima-nuri –Tamenuri
Adam Frank, Fran DeRespinis and Len Provisor
http://www.pentrace.net/penbase/Data_Returns/full_article.asp?id=348
from an article by Trevor Butterworth
If the market abhors a vacuum, the search for nib nirvana led to an
unlikely success story. One day in 2002, at a pen fair in Tokyo, an American-born
graphic artist named Russ Stutler stopped by the booth of a struggling
little Japanese pen company called Nakaya, run by Toshiya Nakata, the
41-year-old grandson of the founder of Platinum, one of Japan's oldest
fountain pen companies.
In 1999, Nakata deliberately created the world's most inefficient pen
company to employ two of Platinum's top retired master craftsmen, Sadeo
Watanabe and Kohsuke Matsubara. Their mission: to create tailor-made
pens, with no compromise on quality. The customer would simply soak
up the expense
- as well as the month or so it took to make his or her pen.
Intrigued, Stutler bought a finished display model, and then watched
as Watanabe adjusted the pen to the way he wrote. On a whim, Stutler
asked if he could add some flex to the 14-carat gold nib. Watanabe complied.
Stutler was deeply impressed, and as a contributor to Pentrace, an
international
English-language fountain pen website based in Ireland, he wrote about
the experience. Soon the site's message boards were flooded.
"
When Russ talked of total hand production, it had a lot of appeal to
limited-edition collectors, especially given the very reasonable prices," explains
Len Provisor, the Chicago-based director of advertising and marketing
at Pentrace. "But the greatest appeal was being able to produce a
nib to a customer's individual specifications. No other company goes to
such trouble. "
By 2003, Watanabe and Matsubara were working seven days a week to
meet international demand. Nakata had to hire three part-time workers
to
handle sales. The most popular models proved to be the most distinctively
Japanese
- those decorated in layers of opaque and translucent lacquer, known
as Wajima Urushi, which sold for between $335 and $540.
More elaborate designs - such as scenes from Japanese or Chinese
mythology - can leave little change out of $10,000. When the Nakaya
staff visited
the world's two largest annual fountain pen shows in 2004 - Chicago
and Washington DC - they sold out of all their stock in a matter
of hours.
To say that Nakata and his staff were amazed at the reaction to their
pens (and the turnaround in their fortunes) is something of an understatement,
particularly as Nakata admits to not even thinking about using the
internet to reach out to enthusiasts. He didn't really know that
there were websites
devoted to the subject of fountain pens and his own company site
is far from advanced.
But the thing is, stylophiles don't really care: Nakaya was a step
back in time - and that meant a step closer to perfection.
Trevor Butterworth is an Irish writer based in Washington DC. He
is a regular contributor to the Financial Times Magazine, and he
has written
for The Washington Post, The Los Angeles Times, Salon, and other
publications. He has, literally, been an ink-stained wretch since
the age of eight.
This article originally appeared in issue 104 of the FTmagazine,
May 7 2005.
© 2005 Trevor Butterworth
Platinum had its beginnings in 1919 when Shunichi Nakata opened a pen
shop in Okayama prefecture. Five years later he moved to Tokyo and formed
the company Nakaya Seisakusho. Later the name of the company was changed
to Platinum Pen Company. It is still located in Tokyo, and the current
president is Toshihiro Nakata, son of the founder.
Recently the Nakaya name has also been revived by Toshiya Nakata, grandson
of the founder. The Nakaya Pen Company employs retired craftsmen from
Platinum who specialize in handmade fountain pens.
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