http://www.zihala.com/pen-ink/

A Brief History of the Ballpoint Pen
Working as I do, for a company that provides promotional pens, I tend to take ballpoint pens for granted. It wasn’t until the other day when I came upon a fountain pen that my Mother had used to write letters to my Father during World War II, that I became curious about how the ubiquitous ballpoint pen came into being.
In 1888, an American leather tanner named John Loud patented a roller-ball pen for marking leather hides. It was never produced nor was any of the other pens based upon 350 patents over the next 30 years. The ink was the problem –either it was too thin and leaked or it was too thick and it clogged.
In 1935, two Hungarian brothers, Laszlo and George Biro, invented an improved version of the ballpoint pen. At the time, Laszlo was an editor at a small newspaper. He was very frustrated by the amount of time that he wasted filling his fountain pens and by the fact that the tip of his pens frequently scratched or tore the newsprint paper. George was a chemist, and together, they created new pen designs and ink formulations to be used in them.
While vacationing at the seashore shortly thereafter, the Biro brothers met Augustine Justo, the President of Argentina. He urged them to open a factory in Argentina. When World War II erupted in Europe a few years later, Laszlo and George fled to Argentina, but first stopped in Paris where they obtained a patent for their pen.
By 1943, the Biros had patented their pen in Argentina and set up a manufacturing facility, but the Biro Pen, as it came to be known, was a failure. Like other ballpoint pens before it, the pen relied on gravity to feed ink to the roller ball. That required that the pen be held in an upright position to write and the ink flow was still unreliable. The brothers went back to the drawing board and came up with a new design for the ink cartridge that used capillary action rather than gravity to deliver ink to the textured roller ball. The newly-designed pen went on the market a year later, and although the new design solved the problems, the pen was not a big commercial success and the Biros ran out of money.
It was, however, very popular with American and British fighter pilots who liked the pens because they would write at high altitudes and did not need refilling like fountain pens. The British Government licensed the pen for the RAF and the United States Department of State sent samples of the pen to a number of American pen manufacturers so they could develop a similar pen. In an attempt to corner the market, the Eberhard Faber Company paid the Biro brothers $500,000 for the U.S. rights to manufacture their ballpoint pen. Eberhard Faber sold the patent rights to the pen to the Eversharp Company, allegedly for $1,000,000, which began an extensive campaign to introduce the pen to America.
In a surprising end-run, a fifty-four year old salesman from Chicago, Milton Reynolds, became the first American manufacturer to successfully market the ballpoint pen. Reynolds had visited Argentina, where he had seen the Biro’s pen in stores and thought that the pen would sell in America. Reynolds ignored the Biro patents, many of which had either expired or had never been properly filed in the U.S. and set up a factory. In a bold marketing move, he made a deal with Gimbels to be the first store to sell the pen. On the first day that the pen went on sale, 5,000 customers showed up at Gimbels and purchased the entire 10,000 pens that the store had in stock at over $10.00 per pen!
While Reynolds made millions of pens in the months that followed, ballpoint pens fell out of favor with the public as they discovered many of the same problems with the pens still existed. Somebody needed to invent a pen that was smooth writing, dried quickly, didn’t skip or fade and, most important of all, didn’t leak.
Two men, Patrick J. Frawley, Jr. and Fran Seech solved the problem. Seech was an unemployed chemist who lost his job when the pen company he worked for went out of business. Working in his own home laboratory, he finally developed the successful ballpoint pen ink. Frawley, was so impressed with Seech’s ink, he purchased the formula and started the Frawley Pen Company in 1949. Frawley’s pen not only had smear-proof ink, it also had a retractable point. An imaginative marketing campaign ensued and soon Frawley’s pen, which he named Paper-Mate, took off. Other brands, such as Parker soon followed suit.
The other person to help revive the ballpoint pen was a French maker of penholders and cases, Marcel Bich. Not only was he appalled by the poor quality, but also by the high cost. He did, however, recognize that the ballpoint pen was a true innovation and resolved to create a low-priced, top-quality pen. Bich went to the Biro brothers and struck a deal to pay them a royalty on their patent and then spent two years studying every detail of every ballpoint pen on the market.
Finally, in 1952, Bich was ready to unveil his new pen. It was an inexpensive clear-barreled, smooth-writing, non-leaking pen called the Ballpoint Bic. The public accepted it with open arms. By the late 1950′s, BIC had captured 70% of the European market.
Today, BIC dominates the market, with other manufacturers like Parker, Sheaffer and Waterman capturing the smaller market for upscale fountain pens and ballpoint pens. The modern version of Laszlo and George Biro’s pen – the BIC Crystal – sells more than 14,000,000 pieces daily. Biro is still the generic name for the ballpoint pen in most of the world. And lastly, Parker black ink ballpoint pens will produce over 28,000 linear feet of writing – more than five miles – before running out of ink.
So the next time someone gives you a promotional pen or you buy one at the store, remember the amazing story of the Biro brothers and their gift to the world, the ballpoint pen.
About the Author
Styla Brite is a published author and product reviewer. Continue reading more about Online Printing Company and
Promotional Pens.
speed Drawing – fast forward pen and ink – canis canem edit
|
|
Gourmet Food Writer Edible Color Markers (10 color set) by AmeriColor $15.99 Use this super ten-color set to dazzle up your cookies or cakes. Use these edible color markers just as you would an ink marker. Draw fun designs on cakes, write messages on cookies, and highlights to icing decorations. The tips are fine for detail work The Gourmet Writer Food Decorating Pens are great for a fun, fast way to add dazzle to fondant cakes, cookies, and all kinds of food. &nb… |
|
|
AmeriColor 2 Pack Gourmet Food Writer Set, Black Marker $7.63 Americolor Gourmet Writer Food Marker Pens -Black 2 Pack. Will write on any firm food surface in true and vibrant colors. Pen set packaged in a sturdy zipper pouch for convenient storage. U.S. Certified Food Color…. |
|
|
Gourmet Writer Food Decorator Pens, Assorted Colors, Set of 10 $14.95 Set includes 10 Beautiful Colors: Purple, Blue, Green, Yellow, Orange, Flesh, Pink, Red, Brown, and Black. Writes on most firm, dry surfaces! Including: Royal Icing; White Chocolate; Cookies- and so many more! Made from US Certified Food Color. Draws fine, medium or broad lines- depending on the pressure…. |
|
|
Official Milky Gear Sketch Pad Black for Gel Pen … |
|
|
Byrd: The Caged Bird $13.87 All products are BRAND NEW and factory sealed. Fast shipping and 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed…. |
|
|
Byrd: Music for Voice & Viols $11.56 All products are BRAND NEW and factory sealed. Fast shipping and 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed…. |
|
|
The Lion King II: Simba’s Pride [VHS] $4.35 Another made-for-video sequel to a Disney masterpiece. As with the Beauty and the Beast and Pocahontas sequels, most of the recognizable vocal talents return, creating a worthwhile successor to the highest-grossing animated film ever. We pick up the story as the lion king, Simba (voiced by Matthew Broderick), and Nala (Moira Kelly) have a new baby cub, a girl named Kiara (Neve Campbell). Like her … |
|
|
A Christmas Carol (Animated Version) [VHS] $9.99 … |
|
|
Creating Textures in Pen & Ink with Watercolor: Part 2 [VHS] $19.95 … |
|
|
LEDwholesalers 9 LED 400 Nm Uv Ultra Violet Blacklight Flashlight 3 Aaa, 7301uv400 $2.75 Just some of the uses for UV LED lights: – Bugs/Insect Detection – Minerals Hunting – Police use it for scanning the crime scene Specifications: Bulb Life :100,000 Hours |