    
Sailor Fountain
Pen
Two
fountain pens that have gotten frequent mention in Scriblets
are the Sailor Professional Gear Silver and the Professional
Gear Slim Gold, pens that in my estimation deserve more
attention than is the case now in blogs devoted to fountain
pens. Easy enough to call me a Sailor aficionado and not be far
from the truth. Seven different Sailor pens lay about my desk,
all used regularly, but the two most frequently used are the
Professional Gear models pictured below. Dependable tools that
are heavily used and never break down are what most of us call
a ‘workhorse’ and Sailor fountain pens slip easily into that
category.
In 1911,
Kyugoro Sakata founded The Sailor Pen Company in Hiroshima,
Japan. The engineering skills of Mr Sakata guided him and his
company, and over the years the quality of Sailor fountain pens
grew, as did the company’s reputation. Nothing in that
statement has changed as far as quality and reputation are
concerned. When you put your money down for a Sailor fountain
pen high quality and long life are assured, or at least that
has been my experience.
My first
Sailor pen was the Professional Gear Slim Gold, purchased at a
pen shop in Tokyo almost five years ago. From the moment I
tested the pen in the shop there was a jackpot feeling about
it. Not a large pen, it measures 4??? inches capped and 5½
inches posted. The body design is traditional and made of black
resin with gold plated trim. The 14k medium nib never falters,
never skips, drips or dries out. It strikes me as just the kind
of fountain pen any pen lover would cherish.
A couple of
months after purchasing the Professional Gear Slim Gold I
returned to the same pen shop and tested the larger big
brother, the Professional Gear Silver. This one is 5¹??? inches
capped and 5¾ inches posted, with a barrel diameter of a ½
inch. It has the same design as the smaller pen but with
rhodium trim instead of gold. The medium nib is 21k with
rhodium inlay. Writing quality? Like the smaller model, it
never fails to lay down a smooth flow of ink, whatever the
brand or color.
No one
would tell you that Sailor fountain pens are cheap. Most of
them retail at prices over $200, but there is comfort in the
knowledge that you are getting a quality item that will last a
lifetime. Surely something worth saving for.
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