The Lost Art of Fountain Pens

Posted on December 15, 2008
Filed Under >Owais Mughal, Education, Society
55 Comments
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Owais Mughal

Being away from Pakistan for many years, I have missed many small things which I always used to take for granted. One such small thing is the joy of writing with a fountain pen.

A Fountain pen was first patented in US in the year 1884 and writing with it eeamined in vogue until quite recently but these days writing with it has become a lost art. I have shopped around for fountain pens in US and the cheapest ones I have found cost around $15 and they write so bad that Pakistani ‘Eagle’ brand can beat then anytime and anyplace. Eagle is an international brand but their product in Pakistan was one of the best or at least it feels like it after all these years of nostalgic memories.

Twenty years ago a Pakistani ‘Eagle’ used to cost around rupees four. I preferred to write Urdu with Eagle because its nib was not that fine. For writing English, I had a ‘Made in China, ‘HERO’ brand pen which was priced around rupees eleven. Then there were some really cheap fountain pens which gave wonderful Urdu writing. One of them was ‘RAJA’ (The Prince) fountain pen which cost around a princely sum of rupees 2 only. Another cheap fountain pen was Dollar which also cost around rupees three.

I had my Raja pen’s nib cut at an angle (Z-nib) to write the ‘Nastaleeq Urdu script. I never mastered the art of writing ‘Nastaleeq Urdu’ or calligraphy but it was fun to at least try writing it.

We used a ‘z-nib’ fountain pen to write Sindhi also. I remember that some of my class fellows used ‘z-nib’ to write complete exam papers of Sindhi. They however, always struggled to finish the paper in time too.

For those of us who graduated high school from Sindh Board may remember that one question in Sindhi salees (easy) board exam was about writing a Sindhi poem in ‘khush-khat’ (good hand-writing). This question was repeated every year and everyone practiced very hard in it to score some sure-shot marks. I used a ‘z-nib’ fountain pen to write that poem.

Somehow improving hand-writing has always been a big deal in Pakistan’s school system. The generation before mine used to write on a washable wooden board (takhti) and used ink-dip calligraphic pens for Urdu. We didn’t use ‘takhti‘ but up to grade X we were not allowed to use ball-point pens as it was supposed to destroy our hand-writings. This strict rule relaxed a bit in Grade XI and XII but I remember a certain teacher in Grade XII used to throw ball-points out of the class window if he saw anyone writing with it.

Writing with ball-points and markers for the past many years made me crave for fountain pens so much so that on a trip to Taiwan in 2003, fountain pens were the first and the last shopping I did. I now proudly own a collection of fountain pens and I write with them whenever I crave.

Today while editing this article I practiced my Parker again and copied the above ‘sher’ (A poem verse) on a white sheet of paper. While my hand-writing is no way close to good or calligraphic my pen however is a perfect Urdu scripter.

Hopefully on my next trip to Pakistan I’ll buy a few more fountain pens.

55 responses to “The Lost Art of Fountain Pens”

  1. VERY NICE MEMORIES BUT ALSO REMINDED PRINCIPLES AND DICIPLINE IN OUR TIMES .PASSED MATRIC 1954 SIND BOARD NOORMOHUMMAD HIGH SCHOOL .WHAT A WONDERFUL TIME.MY FAVOURITE PEN RAJA IRIDIUM NIB.

  2. DuFFeR says:

    i love and have a very nice collection of fountain pens. the post really worth to be written and enjoyed reading alot :)

  3. adeel says:

    well i can proudly say that in my student days, i was considered a master of honing a new pen’s nib. my classmates used to bring the new pens to me. my technique was to keep rolling the pen in my fingers from zero to 180 degrees while writing with it such that all the edges of the nib become perfectly smooth from all angles. i felt more confident in exams if i had a good pen with me. i remember in matric board exams i had 7 fountain pens with perfectly smooth nibs. a professional calligrapher used to teach us khush-khati. i still remember a persian couplet from our 5th or 4th class urdu book
    “gar tu mi khawahi ke bashi khush-navees
    mi-navees o mi-navees o mi-navees”

    (if you want to write beautifully, keep writing and keep writing and keep writing :)

  4. AbuMaleeha says:

    Thanks for taking me back in time.
    Eagle, Dollar zindabad….cant remember correctly but one was bulkier, i think.
    The ink bottle on the main desk..
    The math teacher who would forgot to put the cap back on before putting it in his pocket.
    Cleaning with your hair….or socks.
    Bending the new tip just slightly.

    Watan Aziz got it right about the exams..

  5. ahmad says:

    16 Dec has a lot of painful memories for all Pakistanis, specially for those of us who used to live in former East Pakistan
    We also used fountain pens in our school in Chittagong. There was one which was earlier than Eagle called Writer. We had to fill its “belly” with ink
    The nib of Raja pen was as fat as the pen itself.
    I still remember a Raja pen ad which had a damsel’s hand around the “hand” of the Raja pen and the caption said :
    “Even a Rani would like to have a Raja”

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