Wishing everyone a safe & relaxing Victoria Day long weekend! Here's another vintage fountain pen review from Christopher (thank you, Christopher!) for you...
(all text below by Christopher)
"With all my years as an avid vintage pen collector, I still find, at times, certain lines of the vintage pens rather confusing. Case in point, the 1940s Parker reissued Duofolds and, in particular, the top of that line Senior. When the Parker company first released the 1940 Duofould Senior, it was with a triple banding. This banding had a wide center band surrounded by two thin bands top and bottom. But within a number of years, and before the 1940 Duofold line was subsequently discontinued, the Senior triple banding was replaced with a band that mirrored the Parker 51 Major. But to make things even more confusing, the 1940s Parker Duofold line already had a Major model that sported exactly the same cap banding. So, in my books an easy mistake to think and label a 1940s Duofold Senior sporting this Duofold Major banding a Major. So, it wasn't until I acquired an early 1940s Duofold Senior, and had it to compare with what I thought was a 1940s Duofold Major, that I could stand corrected in actually having both - an early and a later 1940s Duofold Senior. I also made the mistake of labeling each 1940s Duofold I had in my collection either a Duovac or Vacufold, two terms applied by modern vintage pen collectors but never used in the Parker Company's literature. This line of Parker pens was referred to by the company in their 1940s catalogues, as either "Sacless Duofolds" for the Speedline or plastic button fillers or "Sack Duofolds" for the metal button fillers."
(photo courtesy of Christopher ~ please click on image to enlarge)
"So, to properly describe this pen I am featuring, it is a Parker Sackless Duofold from the later production in the mid 1940s, with the Major cap banding. It also differs from the Duofold Major model re: the overall size, being a bigger pen. Otherwise, its Parker laidtone muti colour finish on the cap and barrel includes the clear or pearl vertical strips, which like the Parker Vacumatric, allows the user to check the amount of ink in the pen at any given time. The cap also sports a tapered ring clip, that features the blue diamond Parker lifetime warranty, available on all Parker pens during that period priced over $8.75 and held firmly in place by a black threaded cap jewel. The grip section although not oversized, is both jet black and responsibly adequate. And in turn it supports a good sized 14K Gold Duofold, special factory replacement Parker arrow nib. The long matching blind cap, screwed into the other end of the pen off the barrel, covers a clear transparent amber plastic button, which in turn is the activator for the filling mechanism. To sum up, this lovely writing instrument is in just fabulous condition and as a goodly writer, posting at all of 6 inches but capping back to a more than pocketable 5 ¼ inches. Not a hard pen to fall head over heels with and, subsequently, will become part of the Parker division of my vintage pen collection."
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