Simon Webb: Handcrafted Pens

Simon Webb: Handcrafted Pens

20 October 2015

bark with pens on it - simon webb artisan pens

Simon Webb Artisan Pens

Penning a new business story

Those of us of a certain age, that remember scratchy nib pens and inkwells in desks and then the later cartridge pens, could be forgiven for thinking that the Biro and indeed the text message and e-mail had rendered fountain pens obsolete. But not a bit of it.

Recent years have seen a resurgence in their use as this article on the BBC website demonstrates. And along the way the humble fountain pen has gone beyond splodgy, messy function to become a luxury item & a stylish accessory. Along with cufflinks** and designer handbags for ladies of course.

So, rather than heeding the words of Paul Simon who said,  “you want to be a writer, don’t know where or when?

Find a quiet place, use a humble pen” 

You can instead scribble away with a stylish hand-turned writing implement from the workshop of Simon Webb. Oneupmanship with your penmanship?

In the aforementioned BBC article Sharon Hughes, a buyer for John Lewis commented: “people relish returning to solid, traditional objects to make sense of a difficult and complex world.”

And a solid, traditional and beautifully made object is exactly what you get with a Simon Webb pen. What’s more, no two are exactly the same. It’s not many of us that can afford a Montblanc or a silver Parker Pen. So owning one of Simon’s pens is absolutely the very next best thing.

Indeed, as the company website says: ” Of course pens and pencils are, first and foremost, functional items. But that doesn’t mean they can’t be beautiful too. The writing instruments we produce are a perfect marriage of form and function.”

Pens with history

But beyond being carefully crafted things of beauty, some of Simon’s pens, such as his Lydiard Pens, have unusual back stories.  Available via Swindon’s Lydiard House, the eponymous pens available there are crafted from a 300 year old walnut tree destroyed in the 2013 winter storms.

Alternatively you can be the proud owner of a pen made from the mulberry tree in the garden of the Richard Jefferies’ Museum in Swindon. What finer  and more appropriate thing can there be than to write with a pen made from the tree that was written about by Swindon’s famous son and writer, Richard Jefferies?

Of course, owning one of these pens is unlikely to improve your handwriting and it might not make the muse anymore compliant. But at least you can scrawl and scribe and suffer writer’s block clutching in your hand a sensuous yet functional object. And one with a bit of history attached to boot. Simon even sells Diamine ink to go with the pens. Handy or what?

Contact Simon

You can email Simon at sales@simon-webb.co.uk or go old school and pick up the phone and call him on: 07834 375628.  And, given the ‘old school’ nature of the products – that’s somewhat appropriate.

Bespoke pens 

Simon also takes orders for bespoke pens – hence should you happen to have a piece of wood that carries a special meaning to you there’s an excellent chance it can be turned into a very personal and beautiful writing instrument.

Time to dig out the blotting paper and the airmail writing pad methinks?

To find out more visit the website: http://www.simon-webb.co.uk/index.html

Plain square cufflinks
Round cufflinks in a box

**Simon also turns his hand to cufflinks. 

bog-oak-and-kauri cufflinks
Bog-oak-and-kauri
cufflinks amboyna-in-gold-silver
Amboyna wood cufflinks

Read a brief history of cufflinks here: https://swindonian.me/2016/11/09/a-brief-cufflink-history/

From motherboard to lathe

After many years working in information technology Simon, an engineer at heart, gave up coding and turned to crafting. That said, Simon keeps a finger in the IT pie as curator and director of Swindon’s Museum of Computing. 

Born and raised in Wiltshire, Simon comes from a family of craftsmen. His grandfather was a sign writer in Swindon’s famous GWR railway works and his father was also a talented craftsman who taught Simon much of what he knows.

How to connect with and contact Simon:

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/simonwebbartisan

Twitter: https://twitter.com/simonwebb

Website: https://www.simon-webb.co.uk

Email: sales@simon-webb.co.uk

Tel: 07834 375628

Charlotte Corday Statue Swindon

Charlotte Corday Statue Swindon

19th August 2015

It’s marbleous – but don’t blink!

Charlotte Corday Statue Swindon Town Hall

This post is by way of a share of an article from Barry Leighton of the Swindon Advertiser about the Charlotte Corday statue in Swindon’s town hall.

It’s a fabulous story that concerns the several-years-long and on-off search for ‘the magnificent sculpture of ‘The Angel of Assassination’ which was, as Barry explains ‘stumbled upon quite by accident’.

Charlotte Corday Statue Swindon - in Swindon Town Hall

‘We can only imagine the joy, delight and sheer relief of Borough Arts Officer Terry Court when, after pulling back a crumpled canvas while clearing out an old costume store at the back of the Devizes Road Arts Centre, he was confronted with the elusive, milky white form of Charlotte Corday.’

Barry explains that, during the 1860s, one Pasquale Miglioretti (Italian sculptor 1822-1881) created at least three versions of Charlotte Corday. The lady described as a ‘counter revolutionary heroine’ who acquired infamy (infamy, infamy – they’ve all got it in for me! The BEST movie line ever!) when, in 1793 she stabbed to death Jean-Paul Marat in his bathtub. How very Psycho!

It’s a Marbleous Mystery

To cut a long story short cos you can read the rest of it in the article, it’s a marbleous mystery how one of these wonderful creations landed up in little old Swindon.

But anyway, about a century ago it did! And, since it was found twenty-five years ago the statue has graced the foyer of Swindon’s town hall. As the article says – ‘it’s pretty much unseen by anyone who doesn’t go to Swindon Dance. I’ve seen it though. Yay.

Finally – yes I’m stretching the Dr Who weeping angels‘Don’t blink’ thing a bit but she is referred to as an angel – albeit of assassination. And anyway, tucked away as she is in the town hall – blink and you’ll miss her. Which seems rather a shame really given her infamy.