I found this, of course, at an antique store. The celluloid of the cap and blind cap are gray/silver and black, and the barrel is gray/silver and clear. The nib is terrible, and after this pic I swapped it for a FPR flex. There is no branding anywhere, and I’d really love to know who made it so I could find some of their other pens. In my experience, cheap pens typically use lever fillers. So, this is an unusual one for me.

  • coys25
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    41 year ago

    This thread from from FPN mentions the same duridium nib inscription. It’s old so many of the image links are dead, but the remaining picture shows a pen that looks a lot like yours but has an odd calibrated reservoir in the middle. I wonder if the OP of that thread had a pen like yours given the conversation. You could always see if they are still active!

    https://www.fountainpennetwork.com/forum/topic/113720-no-name-postal-pen/

    • @BoxOfFeetOP
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      31 year ago

      That’s so interesting, it sounds like he did! Reading through that thread, there is some interesting info on third tier pens. Thanks for that!

    • @BoxOfFeetOP
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      21 year ago

      Oh, wow! It does look a lot like that. The cap is different, like you said. And the blind cap is longer on the Eversharp. That took me down a small rabbit hole to this Congress bulb filler! That looks even closer. The Congress looks like a knock-off of the Eversharp, and mine looks like a cheaper version of the Congress. I’m going to have to follow this lead some more.

    • @BoxOfFeetOP
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      11 year ago

      Thanks, I do love finding gems in third tier brands!

  • coys25
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    11 year ago

    What did the text on the nib say?

    • @BoxOfFeetOP
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      21 year ago

      “Warranted Duridium 14K Gold Plate”