Wahl

1925-26
About This Model

The Wahl Company appeared in the later 1910s, the result of takeovers and divestitures as business machines and pens grew, diversified, and specialized. The first true Wahl pen appeared in 1921, and included several distinctive innovations that were not available in the more commonly seen Waterman’s, Sheaffers, and Parkers. The innovations included a humped lever, the roller clip and the clip’s attachment to the pen. Wahl also produced All-Metal pens, which were quite complicated, with numerous engineering changes to enable them to not be metal overlays over hard rubber. 1920s Wahl pens were also notable for a wide variety of nib styles and the decorative patterns that adorned metal and hard rubber pens alike. Wahl was late to celluloid, however, but its late 1920s Gold Seal Personal Points, and the 1930s Eversharp Dorics and Equipoise models were sufficiently well-made and stylish to keep Wahl among the largest first tier firms. The Dorics were outstanding, complex designs that are highly sought today, although they are generally quite fragile. Their lower level Oxfords and Juniors were relatively solid but not as durable.  

About This Pen

This Wahl is from 1925-26, probably one of its $3.50 pens (Wahl advertised by price, far from the first firm to do so.), standard size, of black hard rubber and a full flexible writer.  This pen embodies Wahl’s distinctive features of the day: roller clip, gold trim, rounded and humped lever, and a decorative pattern imprinted into the hard rubber, in this case the Wave pattern.  The nib is a 14K 2, with the Wahl signature engraved in it. It writes a wet broad, flexing to BB, a wonderful pen to write with.

This pen is not for sale.