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1790s
Pencil
lead was invented independently in France
and Australia.
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1800-1850
A metal pen
point has been patented in 1803 but patent was not
commercially
exploited. Steel nibs came into common use in the 1830s. By the 19th
century metal nibs had replaced quill pens. By 1850 quill
pen usage was fading and the quality of the steel nibs had been
improved
by tipping them with hard alloys of Iridium, Rhodium and Osmium.
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1884
Lewis Edson
Waterman, insurance broker invented the first proper
fountain
pen.
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1888-1916
The
principle of the ball point pen actually dates from the late 19th
Century
when patents were taken out by John Loud in 1888 for a product to mark
leather and in 1916 by Van Vechten Riesberg. However neither of these
Patents
were exploited commercially.
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1940s
The modern
version of ball point pen was invented by Josef (Lazlo) and
Georg Biro.
On Summer 1943 the first commercial
models were made. The rights to
Lazlo's patent were bought by the British Government. The ball point
pen
is more rugged than the fountain pen which may be why sales rocketed
during
World War II when the Military needed robust writing implements to
survive
the battlefield environment.
October 1945
The
ball point pen
was introduced to the U.S. market. The pen was sold as "The first pen to
write underwater" this must have
been an unsatisfied demand as some 10,000 were sold at the launch at
Gimbel's
department store in New York on October 29th 1945.
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1953
First
inexpensive ball point pens were available when the French Baron,
Bich, developed the industrial process for manufacturing ball point
pens
that lowered the unit cost dramatically (BIC, Co.)
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1960s
It
was invented fibre, or felt-tipped pen (Tokyo Stationery Company,
Japan).
Papermate's Flair was
among the first felt-tip pens to hit the U.S.
market in the 1960s, and it has been the leader ever since. Following
their
initial success with felt-tips, manufacturers branched out with a
variety
of fiber-tipped instruments, including newly popular
highlighters.
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1980s-1990s
Roller
Ball Pens. The introduction of the roller ball pen have been
made
in the early 1980s. Unlike the thick ink used in a conventional ball
point,
roller ball pens employ a mobile ball and liquid ink to produce a
smoother
line. Technological advances achieved during the late 1980s and early
1990s
have greatly improved the roller ball's overall performance.
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1990s - ...
Rubberized
writing instruments are commonly used by the companies to reduce the
grip.
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From 1997 - ...
Ring Pens'
mass production (GRANDEE Corp.) This pens designed to write without
gripping the pens with 3 fingers.
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Ring-Pen.
First pen in 6000 years history, that no need to
grip.
from 1997... |
Ring-Pens (GRANDEE
Corporation) |
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1990s... |
Rubber muffs to
reduce the grip |
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Need to grip
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1980...1990 |
Roller ball pens |
|
Need to grip
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1960 |
Felt-tipped pens
(Tokyo Stationery Company) |
|
Need to grip
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1953 |
Inexpensive ball
point pens (BIC Co.) |
|
Need to grip
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1940 |
Ball point pens of
Biro |
|
Need to grip
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1884 |
Fountain pen of
Waterman |
|
Need to grip
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1800...1850 |
Pens with metal nib |
|
Need to grip
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1790s |
Wooden pencil with
carbon lead |
|
Need to grip
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600...1800 A.D. |
Quill pens' era |
|
Need to grip
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Dark Ages |
Metal or bone
stylus of Anglo-Saxons |
|
Need to grip
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1300 B.C. |
Metal stylus of
Romans |
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Need to grip
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3000 B.C. |
Reed pens of
Egyptians |
|
Need to grip
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4000 B.C. |
Bronze or bone
tools |
|
Need to grip
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