Posts filed under Meet Your Maker

Meet Your Maker: Patrick Ross, Relic Pens

(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.)

Patrick Ross became a pen maker because of his grandfather, but that didn’t happen the way you might think. His grandfather was a woodworker, who’d felled a tree, milled the wood from it, and made a bed headboard. Ross was already a woodworker, making displays for military awards and medals under the business name The Case Works, so when his grandfather passed away he was the only one who wanted the headboard – “it was a little crudely made.”

Ross had recently met someone near his home in Texas who turned kit pens, so he gave him the wood from the bed and asked for it to become pens for his aunts and uncles in memory of their father. “I watched him and thought, ‘I can do that!’” That wood turner was a pastor whose first congregation turned out to have been the same church in Arkansas where Ross’s grandfather was buried - “small world!”

Because he’d been in the Navy and was already creating military-related items, Ross decided to work with historical wood, and one of his first sources for materials was a company in Philadelphia called Metro Machine that dismantled decommissioned ships. Although there isn’t much wood in ships anymore, he was able to get some wood from some well-known navy vessels, and he made pens, and then tie clips and cufflinks, from it. In tandem with receiving reclaimed wood, he enjoyed doing research on the history of the ships so that he was aware of where the wood had been in its career. At a craft show, a little girl looked over his booth and then told him, “You know, girls like history too.” He told her she was absolutely right, and he started making pendants, earrings, and bookmarks as well.

In 2015, he got his first triple-start taps and dies to make kitless pens, “and then I realized how much tooling was going to cost!” At first, he took a hybrid approach, making rollerball pens using kit-pen sections.

Two years later, Ross and his wife decided to sell their house and live in an RV traveling around the country, so he spent four and a half years in an RV with his turning supplies and made pens and gifts on the road. This fit well with his interest in military topics, as he was able to travel to different bases to show off his wares. However, COVID led them to drive the RV back to Texas and be locked down in it, so he rented a storage shed to work in, and he decided to learn to cast his own materials. At first he cast some of his historical pieces – relics - in clear tubes to be used for making kit pens.

With the easing of COVID restrictions, the Rosses decided to give up RVing and move to Virginia. “We’ve got four seasons here! What I missed about Texas was my 1500 square foot shop, but it turned out the new house had a nice basement.” At the same time, he finally finished acquiring the tooling to make kitless pens, and equipment to cast his own colored materials. “It was exciting. You can make your own designs and not be limited by kits.” He took an intentional approach to learning the kitless process. “I learn things in a segmented way. I learned the basics first, using Bock sleeves, concentrating on bodies and caps, then did sections.” He now prefers Jowo #6 nib units – “they give you freedom with section lengths.” Once he was confident of his skills, he began integrating historical materials into artisan pens.

At the 2014 Dallas pen show, he got an important piece of advice from Shawn Newton. “He said I needed to get on Instagram.” He didn’t actually get serious about Instagram until 2022; some of the early pens he posted there were made from wood from a poplar tree from Monticello and from York Minster in England (which had been renovated following a fire), and they were well received.

All pen makers come at some point think about how to set their own work apart from everyone else’s. Ross was already working with interesting historical materials and making his own blanks. He had a laser engraver for marking historical items and designing his display boxes, so he turned it to working on pens. He now makes a series of resin pens with designs engraved into them and filled with engraver’s color fill, which resemble Japanese chinkin. “A maker is like a doctor – once they learn the basics they figure out their specialty and what makes them get up and go to work. I enjoy making pens so much that I keep making all kinds of them. I don’t like being locked into making the same thing over and over.” Some of his more striking designs have used civil-war uniform buttons in cap finials, or bodies machined from parts of World War II airplanes – a B-17 fire extinguisher rack, a cast aluminum casing for a B-29 fuel gauge, part of a control housing for a B-52 tail gun. What he makes depends on what interesting materials he’s able to source at any given time.

Relic Pens

Sometimes those pens find their way to people for whom they have true meaning. Ross has been attending the Dallas pen show for about ten years; one year at the show, a man walked up to his table who had been commanding officer on a ship whose wood was in a pen on that table, made from the white oak base of a weapons locker. The admiral bought the pen, and has since come back for others. “I get such a charge out of the in-person interaction – someone’s eyes light up over a color or a historic item.”

Ross’s favorite pen that he didn’t make himself is a Pelikan M800 he found at an estate sale, but he’d rather talk about how many amazingly talented makers there are. “It’s a great community – the support you get on Instagram, from other makers and pen buyers, is really appreciated. Otherwise you’re just a little maker, working alone in your shop.”

Patrick Ross’s work can be seen on his Instagram @relicpens, his Etsy shop, and at pen shows in Baltimore, DC, and Dallas.

Posted on October 24, 2024 and filed under Meet Your Maker, Relic Pens.

Meet Your Maker: Brett Arnold, Walltown Pens

(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.)

Brett Arnold’s career as a pen maker began by “a complete accident – or maybe a tragedy.” In October 2016, several trees fell on the shed/shop where he kept his tools. Because he was recovering from knee surgery, he accepted help from a neighbor to assist in rebuilding the shed, and then he needed to replace his tools. When he and his wife were doing that shopping, they saw some lathes and agreed, “That looks like fun, let’s try it,” and he signed up for a woodturning class.

One of the things covered in his class was the making of kit pens, which he found appealing, and he began attending local markets to sell kit pens, because “if you’re going to keep making them, at some point you need to start selling them.” He was soon receiving requests from his customers for this thing called a “fountain pen” – “I knew what they were but didn’t own one” – and made some kit fountain pens before he became aware of kitless pens and began researching how to make them. In late 2019, he had a chance to take a class from Jim Hinze in making kitless pens and quickly began acquiring the supplies needed to make them.

In early 2020, a perfect storm of COVID lockdowns and shoulder surgery meant Brett was at home a lot. “My previous career had been in residential/commercial property management, but at the time I was working part time in a Sherwin Williams store after recovering from another knee surgery, and I was not an essential employee.” The ability to devote himself to working in his shop jump-started his kitless pen creation.

He began doing resin casting at the beginning of his kitless pen journey, “or even before – I was doing inlays in wooden bowls.” Tim McKenzie, maker of the DiamondCast materials, lives not too far away and provided some advice about the needed setup and how to vertically cast round materials. At the moment he casts mostly solid color pieces to serve as accents, and doesn’t sell his blanks, although he will give some away or swap them with other makers. Despite having three pressure pots, and a notebook of close to 400 blank recipes (“including the fails”), he keeps blank casting in perspective – “I have to either make pens or make blanks. I want to make pens.” Most of his pens use materials from Turnt Pen Company, Carolina Pen Company, Pourly Controlled and of course DiamondCast. His wife has made some blanks, helps with choosing colors for blanks, and keeps the company books, but she works fulltime, and is often called away to help her mother, leaving less time to be involved in the shop.

The accent resins are for his Onslow model, a resin pen with cap and barrel finials in coordinating colors, and ornamental rings. “I have a drawer full of blanks in a wide rainbow to match with for the Onslow. I worked in a frame shop as a young man and did a lot of color matching there, so I’m not new to coordinating colors.” Brett’s first trial of the Onslow design was completely clear to see how the parts worked together, but demonstrator pens are not really what he wants to focus on. “To do a demonstrator right, you’d have to charge double for all the polishing work.” He has evolved a way to make pens with parts that are not fully internally polished but still are clear.

He makes the metal parts for the Onslow, and has a preference for nickel silver, despite the expense and the waste – “you waste half the bar due to the size of the cut being about the same as the size of the ring. If you don’t want to make your own, it is hard to find someone who offers nickel silver.” Depending upon the color scheme he will also make rings in brass, bronze, or stainless steel.

Brett has lived in Durham, NC, all his life, and his pen models are all named after places in the area, such as his current residence in Walltown, as well as Catsburg, Onslow, and the former Watts Hospital where both he and his wife were born. His father was a builder, mechanic, and all-around handyman who taught him to enjoy working with his hands, so a craft like pen making is a great fit. He is a full-time pen maker, but he tries to keep the work within boundaries. “You get lonely in the shop by yourself. I work for myself, but I don’t press myself, or work on weekends or at night. I don’t try to kill myself doing it, so I continue to enjoy it.” Movies and podcasts in the shop help keep him entertained, and he has the flexibility to stop working to drive his mother or his mother-in-law to medical appointments. He also organizes the work so it doesn’t get monotonous. “I typically make four pens at a time, so I’m not doing fifty of everything at once – sanding and polishing too many at once will make your hand cramp.”

Participation in the pen makers’ Discord and the As The Pen Turns secret Santa exchange has resulted in the expansion of his collection of pens by other makers. “At first I was buying pens for ‘market research’” – a Vanishing Point, a Montblanc, a Pelikan 800 – “or if someone asked me, ‘How does your pen compare to X other pen’ I bought one.” But his priority is collecting pens by other makers he knows. His preference runs to broad nibs, and he is adding some Sig and architect grinds as well.

Although he’s enjoyed attending pen shows, Brett isn’t certain he wants to participate as a vendor. “I’ve thought about doing Raleigh, his local show, but I don’t want to get too much busier. Things have been a little slower this year but I never run out of commissions, and I can turn them around pretty fast.” The question of having enough inventory to do a show has been a concern in the past, but at the moment he has about fifty pens in his shop. (You know what to do!)

This year, Brett bought two laser engravers, and is using them to add to his bag of tricks. He engraves his Jowo nibs now (and will do a Bock compatible section on request), and he has added resin inlays to some of his pens. “It started as, ‘I could cut different shape ink windows...’” Now he will cut out a shape in the resin with the laser, and then cast new resin back into the shape in solid colors. His pen drops generally happen on Mondays, “a day that’s different” - one more way he makes his pens stand out.

Brett Arnold’s work can be seen on Instagram, and his Etsy store at Walltown Pens.


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Posted on September 23, 2024 and filed under Meet Your Maker, Walltown Pens.

Meet Your Maker: Mikayla Jackson, White Bear Pens

(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.)

Not everyone can say they came to fountain pens through purses.

Mikayla Jackson was in a purse buy/sell/trade type group, and a leather planner cover popped up at a good price, so she sprang for it to try out the planner thing. It turned out to be a cover for a Hobonichi Weeks, and after acquiring such high quality paper, an obvious next step was a fountain pen: a Pilot Varsity, to begin with, which was a success and opened her eyes to the full world of fountain pens. “I wouldn’t make them if I didn’t like them to start with!”

Jackson’s father, who by this time was also her nextdoor neighbor, was a wood turner who specialized in pool cues but also sold kit pens in his Etsy shop. She went out and got him the required gear to make her some kitless pens. However, she became increasingly particular about her pens, wanting them to come out a certain way. Between that, and the temperature in his garage workshop in the Minnesota winters, the pen making stuff soon migrated to her house and he taught her how to turn pens on her own lathe. She bought her first resin pen blank at the Atlanta show in 2023.

Looking around at what was on offer at the Chicago pen show that year, Jackson found motivation for both style and technique. “There were not many clips, not many rings or fun finials. I wanted to take the things I love in a pen and make them in my pens.” This necessitated some attention to fit and finish. Her Ursa model has a clear cap, and she quickly learned about the demands of internal polishing. “Luke from PapaJ Woodworks spent time on Zoom with me showing me how to improve my internal polishing. I got feedback from Brian Gray on creating threads. I’m constantly tinkering with sizes and settings.” She inlays her cap rings so that they do not disrupt the flow of the colors in the material.

Jackson’s focus in her pen making has been on what she calls “whimsy” – “more sparkles, more mixing materials, more fun than a plain three-piece pen.” “There are a lot of somewhat boring, masculine pens, so I want to make a pen with some whimsy and maybe a little femininity.”

Her next design is going to combine some of those attributes in a pocket pen, an eyedropper version of her Ursa model that will be called “Ursa Minor.” “I thought – what if your finial is also an ink window??” While eyedropper pens can be offputting for some pen users, Jackson tried them and found them to be both easy and fun. “I guess eyedropper pens is my risky behavior.”

Inspiration for Jackson comes from photographs of animals and nature, and she can see those inspirations work themselves out in materials being cast by her mom, who also loves pens and enjoys designing the materials for them. She has been casting for about nine months, just for White Bear, with some mentoring from Jonathon Brooks. The DC pen show exclusive for this year was cast “in house” (i.e. next door) based on a photograph of cherry blossoms against a blue sky. “Our family has always been heavy into crafts – whatever we get into, we go all the way.” She thinks her daughter is going the same way: “She can take a pipe cleaner and make herself a toy and play with it for hours.”

Jackson’s career, before becoming a mom/pen maker, was in a medical laboratory, but her first career goal as a teenager was graphic design. That love of art might help explain the immediate maturity of her brand identity. She designed and drew her own logo, and named her business after the street she lives on.

Jackson admits to being a Sailor fangirl – “any Sailor with a medium nib” is her favorite pen. At the DC show this year, she acquired a pen in the popular Oparex material, from Wood Wonders of NC, which has temporarily eclipsed all those Sailors. While she admires the Oparex material, she isn’t sure she will be trying to work with it anytime soon. “I’m turning in my house with my five year old, so I can’t work with anything that might aerosolize or cause other air contamination.”

Bringing her ideas for fun and whimsy to her pens provides the continual rewards needed to fuel the work spent improving technique. “I love seeing an idea come to life, seeing all the things I like coming together in my pens.”

Mikayla Jackson’s work can be seen at pen shows in Atlanta, Baltimore, Chicago, DC, and perhaps San Francisco (this year she is sharing a table at SF with Rob Sanchez of Rob’s Penworks) as well as on her Instagram @whitebearpens. Her website, White Bear Pens, is a work in progress.


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 August 19, 2024 and filed under Meet Your Maker.