The Loiminchay SNOW
Idea/Concept:
The first idea of the SNOW pen dated back one and a half years ago. At the beginning
prototype stage of the Golden Mai (Rice) pen development, we thought of making
a Urushi lacquer pen of minimal colors, simply a Black and White pen.
Memory of my first encounter of snow was still fresh and vivid, although I
was merely a kid at the time. I was with my grandmother in China then. Being from
the south, I have never seen the beauty of snow. From the window of our village
home, viewing afar, snowflakes danced in hordes with various rhythm. The visual
was almost like Jackson Pollack’s painting. Yet, up close, they looked more
scattered and softer. I could almost see the different patterns and shapes of
each snow flakes. The beauty of nature and the beautiful visual burned in my young
mind. This memory formed the base of visual concept for the SNOW pen.
Since natural Urushi lacquer does not traditionally come in white color, we
have decided to follow the centuries old traditions, using off-white color eggshells
to achieve the soft white color effect. Hence, snowflakes would be represented
by small bits of white eggshells on a black background. After many sketches, this
Black and White Urushi lacquer pen begun to take shape. The challenge is to find
a way to utilize this special lacquering technique to create the desired impressionistic
and poetic picture.
Many months and close to hundred of sketches later, we’d decided on
the present design solution. In the final design, we have divided the pen body
into three different stages, time and space. The cap button and the cap became
the stage for the sky (and the future) with heavy concentration of snow. Snowflakes
are in various shapes and sizes, dancing their own dances with their own concerto
of music, with the promise that more of the beauty would come. As the flakes flowed
down to the tip of the cap and the barrel, the stage changed to earth and the
present. The flakes became sparse and of similar sizes and shapes, floating in
all directions, teasing and daring the people to touch and dance with them. Then,
at the end, they gathered again on the ground (the barrel button). Snow only existed
briefly, then it would bind with the earth and change its physical entity forever.
Time became the past. The design of the snow pen is now complete. The sky, people
and the earth, it is quite a nature’s concept as our early project —
the Golden Mai (Rice) pen.
The SNOW or the Golden Mai pen would not be complete, without the people nurturing
and holding them in his or her hands. Ah! The concept then is finally completed.
The theme tied the nature — sky, earth, us — human lives in the middle,
above the ground, beneath the air through time and space. This is my true conceptual
thought and it is why I continue to make pens instead of expressing my thoughts
through paintings or drawings. Up to this day, I still hold, use, draw with, admire
and long for … my hand … your hand with the art object — pen,
to form the total artistic statement. We, human, our relationships with the object
together is to create the soul of the statement.
Technique:
Most pen collectors are quite aware of the Urushi lacquering technique more or
less by now.
Regardless the lacquering technician/master-craftsman/artist (which I’ll
call "artist" from now on) from Japan, China, Vietnam, France, Spain,
or wherever else; this art demands patience, discipline and expertise. A true
artist would have their own quality judgment in terms of skill, level of refinement
and discipline to execute such fine works, time and time again. I have worked
with individuals who are quite skillful, yet, lacking in discipline of keeping
delivering timing and the consistency of quality are just not there. This lack
of discipline and consistency in quality could turn out to be quite disastrous
at the end.
For the SNOW, the first step is to prepare the all ebonite Qian Long pen bodies
for the application of Urushi lacquer. This requires sanding, cleaning (may be
priming) to turn the ebonite pen bodies to their ultimate condition to bind with
Urushi lacquer.
The finest grade Urushi lacquer from Japan is being used in all process. The
artist decided 5 pens a time would be appropriate to maintain the quality. The
next step is to apply eggshells on the pen body. The Rankaku (eggshell inlay)
technique could be applied in various ways. The artist preferred to use cleaned
and dried bits of eggshells to glue on the pen body, one piece at a time. Urushi
lacquer is used to glue the eggshells.
The pen bodies then were put to a Urushi bath with slow revolving mechanism
to prevent dripping. 80% humidity and controlled temperature are needed for Urushi
to "sweat" and harden. The bath would take a few days. Then a thin layer
of black Urushi lacquer would apply in-between eggshells. The pen body then would
be put to a Urushi bath again to "dry".
The same process would be repeated, over 20 times, so the gaps in between
eggshells were filled. At the end, layers of Urushi lacquer would be put on the
whole pen, covering the eggshells as well. Yet, there are three parts of the pen
should be void of Urushi. They are the cap ring area, barrel ring area and the
thread section of the barrel. If Urushi was applied accidentally, the artist must
take care of the problem by wiping it off right away. Otherwise, the ring section
would not fit the ring later. With the many pen parts of our Qian Long body: top
cap button, cap, front end, barrel, and barrel button, according to the crafts-master,
our Qian Long pen bodies cost them at least 30% more work to get it right.
When the pen bodies were dried and resembled an overweight version of the
Qian Long pen, polishing specialist would be called to hand polish the Urushi
laden pens. 5 to 10 times of rough polishing are needed to reveal the eggshells
underneath. In between polishing, holes and imperfections were filled/removed
carefully until the pen look smooth on the surface. By now, several months work
have been put in.
Similar process would take place for intermediate polishing, except a finer
polishing agent was used. After another 5 to 6 times of intermediate polishing,
the pen body became very smooth with dull black color.
Finish polishing then took place, with a mixture of fine powder and oil. Extremely
thin layers of Urushi would apply after each finish polishing in a dust free environment.
It is vital not to have dirt and dust on the pen from this stage onward. No part
in the pen should be touched by hand at this point. The whole pen would let dry
for five to six days. The artist would buff the pen parts with his palm since
any other material would be too rough. This procedure would be repeated until
the pen showed a slight glow.
During the final stage, after final polish with a mixture of extremely fine
powder and oil, the pen would then be cleaned and a last final coat of clear Urushi
would apply. The pen then would be put aside to let thoroughly dried, it would
be hand-buffed with the artist’s palm until the pen showed a brilliant glow.
The whole pen took approximately 37 steps from preparation to finish. This lacquering
business depends a lot on nature, quality of lacquer, expertise and most of all,
patience and discipline. No one can afford frustration.
Let’s say the first five pen bodies were completed in 4 to 5 months
time, then we would send the parts to our pen maker in France to assemble, with
the BOCK #8 nib from Germany, large ebonite feeder from Microtech in France. The
pen studio also provided us with heavy gold plated rings to hold the cap and the
barrel and put in the ink pump system. This procedure would usually take 5 days
to complete. Therefore, the total turn around time for each SNOW is approximately
5 months or so.
Overall, the technical difficulties of SNOW lies on: the even application
of each bit of eggshells, matching the curve shape of the cap, barrel and buttons;
even application of Urushi in between eggshells while maintaining the shape of
the pen; and the most crucial part — sufficiently polishing to reveal the
eggshells. Too much polishing would remove the eggshells, while not enough polishing
would retain small particles of dried Urushi on surface of the soft white eggshells.
While the pen looks simple, it is composed of many pieces of eggshells. Sometimes
simplicity is the most difficult since there are no room to hide any mistakes.
The artistic statement relied on the unification of 5 new parts together. While
each part is different; have its own individual technical difficulties; yet at
the same time they share a certain likeness, a certain unity when pieced together.
Meanwhile, for the Maki-e pens, the painting on the pen is so striking that demand
all attention from the viewers, the wholeness of the SNOW re-stage the beauty
and serenity of mother nature. It is not my intention to say one is technically
more challenging than the other, such as my Erotica series, or the Door Gods,
I am merely stressing on their individual challenges.
I always hesitate to talk about technical aspects and difficulties on Urushi
technique. By showing the SNOW pen with photos and writing about the production
process this way, I hope to present a clear understanding of the hand lacquering
technique to the public.
Up to this point, one noticed that I had not mentioned the jade clip production.
I omitted this part in purpose. Jade crafting is another very specialized field,
and to apply jade crafting to a pen was a totally new adventure to me and in today’s
pen making. Since 2001, I hope, Loiminchay has been proven to the world that we
are capable of providing the best quality and technically know how to merge jade
with Urushi lacquer on ebonite fountain pen.
I would like to mention that the first prototype took a good six months to
complete. Before that we had encountered two sample failures due to the many technical
difficulties. Therefore, we did not start the final production till the middle
of year 2003.
The Stages:
- Concept development
- Design development
- 1st production
- 2nd production
- Production Quantity: 70 pcs. + 3 Complete set of 6 pens.
* 10 pcs. with Solid Silver clips
* 10 pcs. with Black Jade clips
* 20 pcs. with White Jade clips
* 10 pcs. with Purple Jade clips
* 10 pcs. with Green Jade clips
* 10 pcs. with 18K Pink Gold clips
Total 70 pcs.
Patrick Chu
Loiminchay NY
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