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Caring for your Writing Instruments

Wooden Pen Care

Your New Pen is made from natural Wood. As with any fine instrument made from wood some care must be taken to maintain the beauty and the structural integrity of this Handmade Classic.

DO NOT leave your pen in the car. The temperature extremes experienced in a car can damage or destroy your writing instrument. Treat it as you would any fine, delicate instrument. Although it can withstand a lifetime of use it will not tolerate abuse.

DO NOT use cleaning fluids or any abrasive substance (car wax) on any part of your new writing instrument. The fluids and/or abrasives will damage fine finish. 

Do care for your writing instrument the way you would any fine wooden product. Protect it with a light coat of good furniture paste wax designed for wooden products. After proper drying buff with a soft, clean cloth.

Do keep your pen from extremes of heat and cold. Both are enemies of wood. Some woods are very temperature sensitive and may split or develop cracks from extremes of heat and cold. Protect it and it will deliver years of service.

Do use your pen. It is designed to be written with not placed in a drawer.

Resin and Acrylic Pen Care

The Acrylics shown on the Other Material page are man made products. 

These materials are more tolerant to extreme heat & cold and therefore more stable in these conditions.

DO NOT drop your pen, these materials are more brittle and can crack or chip if dropped.

Do use plastic polish to revive the luster, also a quality rubbing compound can buff out light scratches.

Fountain Pen Care

Do not press hard when writing, as this will this will damage the nib. A good fountain pen should glide effortlessly across paper

Periodically flush the nib out, filling it with cool water and emptying it a few times.  Doing this once every few months will keep dried ink from building up and interfering with ink flow. Do not use hot water or solvents.  Use only inks intended for fountain pens 

Carry your pen nib upwards and you should have no trouble with leakage.  Keep your pen full of ink, since ink flow can become irregular if the ink chamber is close to empty.  95% of "leaky" pens can be cured by the above two precautions!

DO NOT soak any part of your pen other than the nib assembly!  Pens are designed to hold liquids, not to be immersed in them.  If ink gets into the inside of the cap, wipe it out with a damp cotton swab.  Dunking the entire cap (or the entire barrel) into water is unnecessary and may harm your pen.  If your pen is clogged with dried ink, soak it by placing it nib-down in only enough water to cover the nib and the lower part of the section, leaving the barrel dry.

When placing the cap on the end of the barrel, set it in place gently, like putting on a hat.  Pressing the cap on the end of the barrel in a rough manner will most likely cause damage to the wood or acrylic body.  If your pen has a screw end on the barrel, just place the cap on lightly... you do not want to screw the cap on either the body end or the nib end tightly.

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