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Sure, we’ll spend the next three days wandering around and finding things we didn’t notice before, but I enjoy Thursdays the most. This year was no exception.
Next to me was a long time collector who had several boxed sets on his table. One of them REALLY caught my attention, so I asked what he wanted for it. “You won’t believe what I’m asking for that set,” he said. Oh no, I thought to myself. There goes a much bigger proportion of my weekly allowance for this show than I wanted . . . in the first hour of the show.
But when he told me his price, I looked at the other sets he had differently. “OK, then I’ll take this one . . . and this one . . . and this one . . . and this one . . “ And so it went until there were only two sets left and I paused a little two long. “I’ll take those last two then,” the guy standing next to me chimed in. I didn’t argue whether I was done – I’d been greedy enough.
They weren’t spectacular sets - mostly from lesser manufacturers - but they were all very clean and they fit perfectly into my collection. There was this great Eagle set in bright yellow, with a Magnum Pointer pencil - these came in more than a dozen different colors, but I didn’t have this one:
A yellow Eclipse set, complete with all the paperwork. I’ve got a few yellow Eclipses, but none in this configuration:
A Diamond Point set in black. I didn’t have one in black and I do like black pencils:
A gorgeous Thompson set in bronze and black. Thompson was a lower tier product, but this set was really clean, and I didn’t have one in this color. I don’t think the box has anything to do with the set, but it looks nice in there:
Now this next one is pretty special, although it isn’t the one that started all this. This Moore set is a demi set in some really unusual colors - grey and brown striped with grey ends. I’ve always lumped these in as part of the “Mastercraft” series, but if there’s a different name for them I’m keen to learn what it was. The great part about finding this set was that I had turned up the pencil in an online auction just a week earlier, and the seller had been . . . optimistic in describing it’s condition. This one, however, is perfect:
Which brings us to that last set I acquired that Thursday morning, the one which first grabbed my attention. As I suggested in yesterday’s post, it’s a Salz:
Note that the pencil has vertical lines on the cap, which was a feature fairly unique to Salz – I haven’t seen a cap like this that wasn’t gold filled. Also, both pen an pencil sport the patented Salz “windowpane” clip:
The April 14, 1925 patent date is a reference to patent number 1,533,466, issued to Ignatz Salz himself:
There’s also a pocketknife included - and even the ta;ng of the blade is marked “Salz Bros. NY”:
But the best part of this set is the box, with that label inside the lid identifying this as a “Three Musketeers” set:
And if you look closely, you’ll see that the Musketeers aren’t wielding swords - they are carrying, respectively, a fountain pen, a pocket knife and a pencil!
Very cool sets!
ReplyDeleteYes, a Very good find :-) , All of them, Thank you (again!) for sharing!
ReplyDeleteWow! If I'd been at Philadelphia, I'd be fighting you for those pens.
ReplyDeleteWhat is the nib on that Thompson fountain pen? I had a set just like that last year that I sold, and it was the best writing pen I've had. It had an Auto-Filler #8 nib on it.
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