'Sign Pen' the first fibre tip pen

Made:
1962 in Japan
maker:
Masao Miura
and
Yukio Horie
One original 'Sign Pen - the first fibre tip pen, 1962'

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One original 'Sign Pen - the first fibre tip pen, 1962'
Science Museum Group
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum

One original 'Sign Pen" - the first fibre tip pen, 1962

One complete and original 'Sign Pen' - the first fibre tip pen, 1962, manufactured by Pentel in Japan. The fibre tip pen was invented in Japan in 1962 by Masao Miura and Yukio Horie, who ran a business making art materials. The pens appeared in Britain in 1967. The radically new writing device, equally suited to writing or drawing, was perhaps inspired by the writing brushes used in the East for centuries. Water-based ink absorbed in a fibrous cartridge feeds through the tip, made of harder fibre, by capillary action. The first tips were made of bamboo, but synthetic fibre soon replaced this. These pens are especially popular with children.

Details

Category:
Printing & Writing
Object Number:
1977-296/1
Materials:
plastic (unidentified), felt (tip) and metal (unknown)
Measurements:
overall: 20 mm x 155 mm x 25 mm, .003kg
type:
pen
credit:
Pentel (Stationery) Ltd.