The pen under review here is again different from the ones described before...for one, it is an ebonite FP and it came as a pleasant surprise when I realised that it was an ebonite FP only recently...I was taking photos of this pen and I was unscrewing the section and maybe the slight resistance I encountered suggested that it was not the usual plastic FP and I thought I should smell and decide...it IS ebonite...and, then this pen doesn't have an obvious name, only a 'P' on the clip...nothing on the cap, nothing on the barrel...and the nib has 'MHATRE' and 'WRITER' engraved on it...
The other straightforward features are…it is a screw cap, ED filler…and yes, it is black in colour!! A nice black, in fact…and it has a very nice arrow clip…and as usual, here are the pictures…
And as usual, I posted this first on FPN and my friend Hari responded thus..."Dear Jai, the "Writer" from Mhatre was a very popular inexpensive pen, even as far as in Madras in the late 50s-60s. My mother had told me about how they used to buy a "writer" 'pena' (the Tamil word for 'pen') at the start of the school year for a grand sum of one rupee from the neighbourhood grocer.
She also told me an interesting anecdote, it seems the grocer used to sell a fill of ink for 3 or 5 paise. So the kids would go to the shop on the way to school and get the grocer to fill their one and only pen with a 5 paise dose of ink. If the ink ran out in the middle of school, a drop of water on the nib would last a couple of pages more. Those were the hard days.
I would also like to recall the comments of Mr C G Bhargav who responded to my PLAZA post here and said that he has been living in Chennai for the past 50 years and he says (I quote from his response)..."and I remember Writer (I think in later years it was known as Mhatre Writer or something like that)..." If Mr Bhargav happens to see this post, he'd be happy to see pictures of a specimen of the Mhatre Writer...
The other straightforward features are…it is a screw cap, ED filler…and yes, it is black in colour!! A nice black, in fact…and it has a very nice arrow clip…and as usual, here are the pictures…
And as usual, I posted this first on FPN and my friend Hari responded thus..."Dear Jai, the "Writer" from Mhatre was a very popular inexpensive pen, even as far as in Madras in the late 50s-60s. My mother had told me about how they used to buy a "writer" 'pena' (the Tamil word for 'pen') at the start of the school year for a grand sum of one rupee from the neighbourhood grocer.
She also told me an interesting anecdote, it seems the grocer used to sell a fill of ink for 3 or 5 paise. So the kids would go to the shop on the way to school and get the grocer to fill their one and only pen with a 5 paise dose of ink. If the ink ran out in the middle of school, a drop of water on the nib would last a couple of pages more. Those were the hard days.
I would also like to recall the comments of Mr C G Bhargav who responded to my PLAZA post here and said that he has been living in Chennai for the past 50 years and he says (I quote from his response)..."and I remember Writer (I think in later years it was known as Mhatre Writer or something like that)..." If Mr Bhargav happens to see this post, he'd be happy to see pictures of a specimen of the Mhatre Writer...