Post image for Wahl Flower

Wahl Flower

by TAO on 03/25/2010

The Wahl Company is still in business today. If you are a man and had a trimmer used on your hair at the barber you most likely experienced one of their products. Sadly, they do not make writing instruments anymore having sold that division to Parker in the 1950s.

A Wahl pen and friends.

Years before they were absorbed Wahl itself absorbed a firm to buttress their market leading Eversharp mechanical pencils. Boston Fountain Pen Company made good quality pens and had a few nifty patents for an inner cap and roller clip. They were always a bit short on capital, however, and Wahl knew a good thing when it saw it. After the purchase in 1917 the old Boston marked stock was used up and eventually Wahl started sticking its name on the barrels and nibs.

Wahl eyedropper pen.

So the Boston pen became the Wahl Tempoint pen. Tempoint rolls off your tongue and has a nice sound but the meaning is pretty nebulous. It’s said that it is supposed to mean “tempered point” to bring to mind flexibility and strength but in my head also conjures up the idea of “temporary point”. Anyway, the catalog of the time says the point is crafted with a special “hand hammering process” and the iridium is “fused” not “annealed” to the point for a longer life. I’m thinking if that’s the case I want to be annealed for my personal longevity.

Until the introduction of the Wahl Metal Pen these warmed over Boston pens were what was peddled. Still, they were on par with the best black hard rubber products of the time. In this post I’m showing off a simple chased BHR Tempoint eyedropper. In the 1919 catalog this model is called the “Ardmore” which may or may not be a model name. I say that since next to all the names in this book are the legend “Telegraph Word” which makes me think that these tags were used for orders via that method. One of the best things about the catalog other than the pregnant advertising prose is an illustration used a few times of a wing-collared businessman holding a pen the size of a baseball bat. It’s just superimposed over his hand and gives a certain surreal mood to the page.

Elephantitus of the pen.

My pen came to me by way of Paris a few years ago. I was lucky that the original box and instruction insert were with it which shows it’s an early model after the change in ownership since on the lid are the words “Heretofore known as the Boston Safety Pen”. Does it get quainter than that? It fills with an eyedropper which is the simplest ink reservoir system for a fountain pen. You unscrew the section and squirt ink directly into the barrel with something similar to, well, an eyedropper. The nib is a small stub which has a nice, sharp feel to it.

A "Tempoint" nib.

The other noteworthy thing about the pen is that it came with a skull clip. The French seemed to keep using aftermarket clips longer than other places and I find this one to be especially interesting. I did a blog post about it a while ago here.

So, this is a rather unremarkable but strangely satisfying pen. An eyedropper is the fountain pen stripped to the core and it’s always good to go back to basics.

Wahl Tempoint writing sample.

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{ 14 comments… read them below or add one }

Jenny O May 14, 2010 at 9:46 am

That nib looks flexy! *drool*

Reply

Julie April 26, 2010 at 3:36 pm

Just catching up on my reading. Lovely post about Wahl and your Tempoint!

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TAO May 5, 2010 at 6:43 am

Thank you for you comment. It’s a neat old pen.

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Kim March 31, 2010 at 10:45 pm

Photos stunning as usual! Thank you for sharing!

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hazel March 28, 2010 at 9:32 pm

did you see ariel k’s monkey clip?

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TAO March 29, 2010 at 12:15 am

Yep, I’ve seen his clips. He makes a number of them including a cool dragon one. A good source for modern clips.

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lady dandelion March 28, 2010 at 8:39 am

Love the atmosphere in the 2nd photo with the accessoires. Surprising clip. Great with the historical info on the pen.

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TAO March 28, 2010 at 10:49 am

The clip is cool and I wish I had more like it. A persuasive person urged me to bid on it and I got lucky. I seem to have too many old items of men’s accessories about. Thanks for the kind words on the post.

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Julie (Okami) March 28, 2010 at 6:02 am

Lovely pen and what a wonderful looking nib!

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TAO March 28, 2010 at 10:49 am

Thanks!

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Mona March 25, 2010 at 11:32 pm

Neat nib, and what an unusual clip!

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TAO March 28, 2010 at 10:51 am

One person I know (Pep) didn’t like the clip since it seems too dark. Oh well.

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MaryMG March 25, 2010 at 9:58 pm

Nice review. Love the clip!

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TAO March 28, 2010 at 10:51 am

Merci beaucoup!

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