Between 1929 and 1933, when the design of the 100 settled,
for at least a few years, into the form we know, the pens underwent a dizzying
series of developments. Those who should know better often claim that it’s
easy to collect Pelikans because there was only one model. To those of us who
pursue the elusive early birds there is a dizzying array of variants--plain caps
and caps with bands; caps with a single pair of vents and double vents; cylindrical
captops and tapered captops; barrels made of bakelite, barrels made of celluloid
and barrels made of acrylics; sections that are straight and sections that taper,
feeds with three even vanes and feeds with a recessed center vane. You get the
idea, and I haven’t even begun to talk about the real arcana, for example
the section to inner cap seals. Through all these changes, month by month Pelikan
was tweaking the design and function of the pen.
Then came form. Possibly as early as 1930, but certainly by 1931, Pelikan
decided to produce their basic pen for the luxury market, which despite hard times,
still existed. The 111 was probably the first of these. It featured a guilloched
14 karat solid gold band over the basic celluloid shaft. The rest of the pen was
the standard black hard rubber. The 110, despite it’s earlier number, came
next with a white gold-filled cap, captop and barrel. Only the black turning knob
remained uncovered. This was followed by the 112, which was all 14 Karat gold
covered (except for the mechanism). Most famously, the T111 offered a steel binde
(not the sterling of the later 700 and 900 models) that was worked in the elaborate
and painstaking Moorish-influenced, Toledo metalworking style.
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Toledo images courtesy of ChartPak |
Heavy Metal—From the collection
of Rick Propas/photography by Rick Propas.
According to company history, all these models came in 1931 and not later,
as commonly assumed. Later in the decade, outside jewelers, most notably Maenner,
produced authorized models that were more ornate and completely clad, top to bottom.
And then there were the less common celluloids in two styles. The basic 100
featured colored bindes in gray, red, yellow, blue, and brown marbled.
Blue 100 - Photography by David Isaacson,
pen from the collection of Rick Propas.
(DI/blue100.jpg)There was also a tortoise shell with red hard rubber cap and
mechanism.
RHR Tortoise 100 - Photography by David
Isaacson, pen from the collection of Rick Propas
(DI/RHRtort100.jpg)These variants seem not to have been produced in large numbers
and may have been marketed and sold mostly outside Germany. Today, when these
uncommon pens become available they frequently fetch a ransom. The number 101
designated all-celluloid pens (except, as always, the turning mechanism). These
pens came in lizard and tortoise, as well as red, green and blue. The latter colors
resemble not the marbled bands of the “regular” pens, but the jades,
lapis and corals of American makers.
Coral 101: from the collection of Gerhard
Brandl/photography by Gerhard Brandl.
Lizard 101—From
the collection of Rick Propas/photography by Rick Propas.
These pens rival 110s, 111s and 112s in value and seem much less common.
With these successes, beginning in 1934 Pelikan expanded. First came a mechanical
pencil, the 200, as well as a less common variant, the short 210, both marketed
as the “Auch Pelikan” or “Pelikan, too.” Put simply the
design of the pencil was the “clicker.” The pencil, also has its own
arcana in terms of markings and materials. In the interests of sanity, we’ll
let that go for now. Like the pen, the pencil was relatively advanced, especially
in comparison to the simple, even primitive, propel/repel pencils produced by
other German makers such as Kaweco and Osmia.
Over the next three years, Pelikan began to seriously revise their product
line for reasons that were both technical and market driven. Around 1937 Pelikan
replaced the yellow celluloid barrel with one of green plastic, a material that
was more easily workable.
That was just the beginning. Although Pelikan by now was reknowned for the
beauty of their celluloid Bindes, hard rubber was the basis for most of the pen,
apart from the shaft. Hard rubber was and is a an unstable compound, essentially
sulphurated rubber, susceptible to water damage and oxidation. Earlier pen makers
had used other materials, such as bakelite and Pelikan had used it briefly for
the shafts of their earliest pens. But bakelite is heavy and brittle and like
hard rubber does not take color well.
Beginning with Sheaffer in 1926, celluloid came to dominate the manufacture
of pens until after World War II. From the start, Pelikan had used celluloid for
the bindes of most of their non-metal pens. After 1930 the bodies of the pens
were of celluloid, but Pelikan stayed with hard rubber for the caps and captops
until 1937 or 1938. Then, gradually, they began moving toward celluloid, first
for the cap tubes, then for the captops, and finally for the filler mechanisms.
Interestingly, Pelikan held onto the hard rubber machinery, which survived the
war and later surfaced in Milan (more on that later). The result is that today
many of the pens come down to us with mixed materials, a cap tube of celluloid
mated to a hard rubber captop. Some of these pens may be later “marriages”
but many are quite correct. Pelikan stayed with hard rubber for the mechanism
somewhat longer, and for good reason. Celluloid proved difficult to mill in the
distinctive manner of the Pelikan filler knob. They did produce a milled celluloid
knob for a few years before introduction of a 100 model with the smooth knob (often
erroneously designated the 100C), but by 1939, except for foreign production,
hard rubber was gone from Pelikans.
The second reason for Pelikan’s augmentation of its line had to do with
size. Compared to almost every pen of the time, the Pelikan 100 seemed small.
In use the pen was, in fact, much larger than it seemed, for the cap posted high,
creating a comfortable center of balance, and the gripping section was thick,
filling the hand. But there was no denying the relatively small ink capacity when
compared to larger pens.
In 1937, Pelikan introduced a new model. The 100N did not replace the 100,
which continued in production until Pelikan shut down in 1944, but was offered
alongside it. Interestingly, some of the early production 100Ns bear the characteristics
of the early 100s, yellow celluloid barrels and hard rubber sections, mechanisms
caps and captops. A few even have the old Pelikan logo, which was not streamlined
until a year later.
The 100N was offered in variations similar to the 100, although the “minor”
bindes, yellow, red, brown and blue, were dropped, as were the red, coral and
jade 101s. What was left were the standard, green, black, gray, tortoise and lizard.
Moreover, by1939, the precious metal models, if made, were no longer catalogued.
By then, of course, rising economic and political stability began to seriously
afflict all of Europe. By the latter part of the decade Pelikan, under government
edict, also curtailed the use of gold for nibs, first at home and then abroad.
Note: Any history of Pelikan must rely on
two basic accounts, those of Jürgen Dittmer and Martin Lehmann in Pelikan
Schreibgeräte, and Andreas Lambrou, most completely in Fountain Pens of the
World. In addition, I have used Pelikan’s own company history, available
at ChartPak. I also
found helpful material in The PENnant (vol.XV, no.2, Summer 2001) which was devoted
to Pelikan and which I edited. Other material on pen history in general came from
Bowen and Lambrou. There is a small amount of useful Pelikan material in Miroslav
Tischler’s Penkala Writing Instruments. Regina Martini’s Pens &
Pencils, is a good source for identifying models and for background.
I am indebted to Gerhard Brandl, Jurgen Dittmer, Martin Lehmann,
Sharon Propas and Len Provisor who read, commented and fact-checked this history.
I, and not they, however, am responsible for all errors, omissions and bad commas.
Text © 2003 Rick Propas. Photos © 2003 as indicated in
captions.
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