Posts filed under Meet Your Maker

Meet Your Maker – Greg Hardy, Hardy Penwrights

Greg Hardy, Hardy Penwrights

(Caroline Foty's first fountain pen was a 1970s Sheaffer No Nonsense that still writes perfectly. Since she discovered pens by independent makers, she wants "one of each, please" and wants to meet all the makers. Maybe you do, too. She lives in Baltimore with pens, cats, and all kinds of fiber arts supplies.)

For many people, the path that leads them to make things begins before they were born. Greg Hardy, of Hardy Penwrights, spent time with his brothers in their grandfather’s workshop starting at age 6 or 7, making and fixing things. As a teenager he began carving wood and making jewelry, with a lot of inspiration from an art teacher who was skilled in and enthusiastic about Celtic art forms and uncial calligraphy. “He was the first person I ever saw who used a fountain pen – an Osmiroid that he never cleaned and ended up having to use as a dip pen.”

Despite coming into possession of his great-grandmother’s 1930s Wearever fountain pen at the age of 12 (which he is just beginning to restore), Hardy didn’t move to making pens until ten years ago, when a stressful job as a school superintendent meant he needed to spend some non-working time working with his hands, “a daily challenge to keep my head from spinning. I wanted to apply things I knew how to do in new ways.” He retired five years ago from that job and cut back to merely “seventy hours in the shop” – by which time the shop included five lathes and his son Gavin as fulltime staff. Nowadays, he generally heads into the shop at four or five in the morning, and by lunch time he’s put in an eight hour day and is ready for a nap (he’s a big believer in naps).

Hardy Penwrights

What sets Hardy pens apart from some others is the incorporation of metal work, whether it’s a simple rollstop, a beautiful clip, or complex all-over design. “I think every maker tends to move to some area of specialization – for some it’s casting materials or incorporating wood. In our case it’s the metal work.” He chooses a word that echoes Adolphus Smith: “My joy is the metal work.” Having studied jewelry making as a teenager, it quickly became clear to him that there were many aspects of a pen that could be done with metal. “I was no longer limited to a single detail in metal art. I could have many details that formed a series of thoughts or a bigger idea. I now had space to tell a story.”

Hardy Penwrights

Hardy Penwrights Secret Garden.

In 2021, his Secret Garden pen won Best Metal Mastery recognition in the Pen World Magazine Reader’s Choice Awards, and a more recent pen is inspired by the many legends surrounding Glastonbury Abbey in southern England. Even a “simple” rollstop like the one on their Traveller model took a lot of research and development, not only to get the weight right but to test that it didn’t roll down his handmade writing desk.

Hardy Penwrights

Hardy Penwrights Glastonbury Abbey.

Inspiration? “It would be easier to say what doesn’t inspire me.” Constant reading about art, music, anthropology, theology, and philosophy produces a constant stream of ideas for pens, such as the Glastonbury pen or the pen based on the Scots legend of the selchie. “I’m pretty easily inspired.” Hardy’s favorite pen he didn’t make, a 1937 Parker Vacumatic, provided inspiration for his Retro model. One thing that doesn’t inspire him is a big spread of available inked pens. “We already do a lot of pen washing in the shop, and that’s enough, so I only have two pens inked at once.”

Hardy Penwrights

Being in the far north of New York, south of Buffalo, does not in the least take the Hardy shop off the beaten track. “Everyone has sought out another maker to get help at some point, and most of us are quick to help.” Hardy cites Jason Olson of Write Turnz and Troy Breeding of Country Made as early sources of help for him, and intends to be a “good citizen” of the pen community when asked for assistance by others. Most people nowadays come to him with questions about metal work, having already learned to make pens. Rich Paul of River City Pens came and spent a few days learning to do some work with metal; on one of those days, Tim Crowe of Turnt Pen Company joined them, and Rich, Tim, Greg, and Gavin turned out a run of pens together, followed by pizza and beer.

Hardy Penwrights

Hardy Penwrights Traveller.

Crowe got his start with some lessons from Hardy, who knew his dad. “When Tim first called me, I thought I was talking to his father also named Tim. I bought my first guitar from Tim’s dad’s music store, and when he went back to school, he student taught in my high school history classroom.” While all pen makers cite close connections with other makers, this has to be one of the tightest. Hardy’s new model for this year honors the company’s tenth anniversary, and is made from a custom resin pour by Crowe.

Despite the joy of creating beautiful pens, that’s not the end-all for Hardy. “I love pens, but I love more what people do with pens. Someone in a workshop builds hammers, and people build cathedrals with them.”

Greg Hardy’s work can be seen at pen shows in Philadelphia, Baltimore, Chicago, St Louis, DC, Boston, Detroit, Ohio, and perhaps Raleigh, as well as online at Hardy Penwrights and @hardypenwrights on Instagram.


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Hardy Penwrights
Posted on February 24, 2023 and filed under Meet Your Maker.

Meet Your Maker – Adolphus Smith, Darailpenz

Adolphus Smith, Darailpenz

(Caroline Foty's first fountain pen was a 1970s Sheaffer No Nonsense that still writes perfectly. Since she discovered pens by independent makers, she wants "one of each, please" and wants to meet all the makers. Maybe you do, too. She lives in Baltimore with pens, cats, and all kinds of fiber arts supplies.)

It’s not often you ask a pen maker, “How long have you been making pens?” and the answer is: “Nearly three decades.”

Adolphus Smith, the man behind Darailpenz, was working for a furniture company when he saw a perfume atomizer someone had hand turned, and he thought, “I could do that.” Soon there was a Jet Mini wood lathe in his garage in Ohio, and he was making atomizers, bowls, furniture, and also kit pens. In the absence of the multitude of online resources available today, there was a lot of trial and error and learning by doing. However, he persisted to the point that he needed a company name for his work; he started with his first name, but then settled on Darail, his middle name.

Darailpenz

Initially, the materials available for making pens were limited – most kit pens featured wood, and there was not the range of colorful materials available now. About seven years ago, he was introduced to kitless pens by a young maker who said, “Once you do these you’ll never go back.” He acquired the necessary taps and dies and found guidance through YouTube videos of makers turning kitless pens. Both kit and kitless pens remain important to his portfolio, however. First, “My wife likes kit pens.” But in addition, he has found that people new to pens or intimidated by fountain pens can still walk up to his table at a show and buy a rollerball or ballpoint kit pen and have a good variety of attractive affordable pens to choose from.

Darailpenz

In addition to the universe of available materials, he particularly enjoys turning soapstone and alabaster, using the same tools as for the acrylics – as long as they are kept sharp and in good working order. Soapstone presents a favorite challenge. “It’s soft, you can’t rush it, you can be almost done and it will shatter.” His stone pens usually are sold before he can display them at a pen show.

Although he has dabbled in casting his own blanks, “it doesn’t call out to me.” He has a son, however, who enjoys casting and has been making blanks for his pens. And following what calls out to him keeps him happy with what he does. “To me it’s relaxation. I don’t look at it as a job.”

Darailpenz

He finds constant inspiration in his materials. “The nature of each blank is what inspires me.” He enjoys working with celluloid, although it can be finicky, because of the challenge it offers. Which blank gets turned at any given time comes down to inspiration as he looks through a collection of blanks spanning fifteen years. Even beyond the fact that a given blank will make a different pen every time it’s turned, he will sometimes turn a blank on a slight angle to get a different look. Before cutting a blank he looks at it to decide which area should become a pen’s section, cap, and barrel. His philosophy is to “let the material talk to you.”

When asked about a favorite pen, Smith thinks immediately of one of his own that got away. “It was a Conway Stewart blank with blue, green, and purple. I put it on the table and said, ‘If they don’t buy it I’ll keep it,’ and it sold right away.” He’s still looking for more of that material. (Anybody have any? 😊 )

Darailpenz

In search of a new challenge, he has ordered materials to make custom clips, to learn how it’s done and see if it brings that necessary joy. He’s also teaching some of his thirteen grandchildren to work in his shop (including young Darail), and he plans to begin naming pen models after his grandchildren.

Smith is willing to invest more time in custom orders, and is working with his son to improve his online presence. He intends to make and post some videos, especially of turning his stone pens.

Darailpenz

When he teaches pen turning in his workshop, which is still outfitted with his Jet Mini lathe, “I tell them to keep it a joy. I don’t watch sports, my joy is in the shop.”

Adolphus Smith’s work can be seen on Instagram, at his website, and in his Etsy shop. He has a full show schedule this year, and you can visit him at shows in California, Baltimore, Arkansas, Chicago, St Louis, DC, New York, and possibly Atlanta, San Francisco, and, in the fall, London.


Enjoy reading The Pen Addict? Then consider becoming a member to receive additional weekly content, giveaways, and discounts in The Pen Addict shop. Plus, you support me and the site directly, for which I am very grateful.

Membership starts at just $5/month, with a discounted annual option available. To find out more about membership click here and join us!

Posted on January 24, 2023 and filed under Meet Your Maker.

Meet Your Maker – Jon Tello, Hello Tello Studio/Tesori/Scripting New Stories

Jon Tello

(Caroline Foty's first fountain pen was a 1970s Sheaffer No Nonsense that still writes perfectly. Since she discovered pens by independent makers, she wants "one of each, please" and wants to meet all the makers. Maybe you do, too. She lives in Baltimore with pens, cats, and all kinds of fiber arts supplies.)

Teenage pen snobs, take heart! You have an exciting future ahead of you!

Jon Tello, the artisan behind Hello Tello Studio, Tesori Italy, and the new Scripting New Stories Collective, says he was a “pen snob” even in high school. “I had loaner pens and wouldn’t let anyone touch my own pens.”

An artist who paints, draws, and does graphic design, Tello’s “day job” is working with nonprofits that help artists do community work via the arts around the world. He and his family lived in Italy for almost ten years working with different communities via a Christian nonprofit, and they found that there was a great need for assistance to victims of sex trafficking. Italy is one of the primary destinations for victims of trafficking to Europe, especially for those coming from Africa, and very few resources are available in Italy to help them.

In 2015, when the family was home from Italy for a visit, his wife’s uncle gave him a handmade wooden kit pen for his birthday, and invited him to the workshop to show him how it was made. His interest was immediately piqued – “I didn’t have to settle for ugly pens!” His first kit pens were not fountain pens. “As I grew in making kit pens, I decided I wanted to know why people would spend so much on a fountain pen, what was so great about the writing experience.” A couple of secondhand Italian fountain pens made it all clear. “I was determined to make pens that wrote just as well and were more aesthetically pleasing than the ones I had bought.”

Tesori Venezia

Back in Italy, he began building a shop and making kit pens, selling them via Hello Tello Studio, but quickly felt limited and moved to kitless pens. At the same time, the ongoing need for funds for work with trafficking victims inspired him to raise additional money by selling pens.

When the family prepared to return to Ohio in 2021, they left the shop setup behind, and established Tesori Italy as the legal business entity in Italy for the support of the Alba Safe House that they helped open for victims of trafficking. Tesori (which means “treasures” in honor of the precious value of each survivor,) employs one person, as well as commissioning a survivor to make their handmade pouches. They make kit pens and pens for businesses. Training is ongoing in hopes that the Venice pen can be made there in the future. Tello built a new shop in the US to continue making pens to be sold both through Hello Tello and Tesori.

Tesori Venezia

Tello is clear that he is “an artist at heart,” and sees his pens as functional pieces of art. The Venetian glass work in the cap finials of his pens, along with the body shape and flush cap, are his artistic signatures. This artist’s way of looking at the world means inspiration is everywhere – “Everything inspires me, my brain never stops. I have notebooks full of designs I want to do!” While the artistic possibilities of material making are tempting, he feels there are other places he’d prefer to spend his attention in the development of pens as works of art.

Tesori Venezia Millefiori

He has two favorite pens that he did not make himself. He won a pen from Tim Cullen of Hooligan Pens with engraved snowflakes that is a favorite. A Legend model by Ryan Krusac, with a scrimshaw design of a dragon on the barrel and dragon scales on the cap, is another pen that is always in use. Both appeal to him as art, beyond their utility as pens.

Tesori Venezia

Like many other makers, Tello has kids who want to get into the act. His six year old daughter decided this year that she wants to make pens for her teachers and friends for Christmas, so he is teaching her the basics of making kit pens, and helping her create printed sleeves so that her work will be nicely packaged.

As if all of the foregoing is not enough to keep him busy, earlier this fall Tello formed the Scripting New Stories Collective to raise funds in an ongoing way for the Alba Safe House. “It really began with Ukraine – makers were stepping up with pen raffles to raise funds for relief, and it was a light bulb moment – the community is interested in doing good so let’s find a way to rally more people.” SNS has a separate identity from Hello Tello because “I don’t want it to be about me.” The response was immediate as makers offered pens for SNS to sell or auction. More donations are always coming. In 2023 the retail aspect of the site will expand with limited editions featuring different makers, with the first one expected from Jim Hinze. Tello says he has received many notes from participating makers thanking him for involving them. “Pen makers are one of the most caring of communities – like a mini extended family. This is a way for people to do what they already do, and have an impact, come together to do good, and be part of something bigger.”

Those notebooks of pen designs will bear fruit in some plans for 2023, involving more metal and glass work and enameling, and at least one new model. “There is no stopping point – you are always growing, there is always more you can do, no end to the creativity.”

Jon Tello’s work can be seen at pen shows in Chicago, DC, Ohio, and Atlanta, as well as at Hello Tello Studio, Tesori Italy, and Scripting New Stories Collective.


Enjoy reading The Pen Addict? Then consider becoming a member to receive additional weekly content, giveaways, and discounts in The Pen Addict shop. Plus, you support me and the site directly, for which I am very grateful.

Membership starts at just $5/month, with a discounted annual option available. To find out more about membership click here and join us!

Tesori Venezia Vintage
Posted on December 19, 2022 and filed under Meet Your Maker.