
Having written this Ty-Phoo Tea pen blog below a fair while ago, around two and a half years ago, I had forgotten it was put from ‘Published’ mode and back into ‘Draft’ status. So I thought it would be nice to air it again. Just an appreciation of a one hundred plus a few years vintage pen. I have been using many of my vintage pens, including the Ty-Phoo, over the last few days. Keeping them alive has been a far and few between activity this last year. Very remiss. So it was nice to get back to focus on the pens and the realisation of the calmness they bring. I have now whittled them down to a couple of dozen. And that number is my intentional contained focus for use in 2026. No more purchases unless a real ‘doody’ presents itself.
A few recent photographs of the wintery calm ambience in the land of Summers-ville. 2025 was anything but calm. So a period of calm is now a welcome gift.




Back to the Ty-Phoo Tea pen blog.
For a 100 year old pen it has spirit. Not a blog really. Just appreciation for a pen that can keep producing when you pick it up. With an old nib from the 1920’s you tend to tread softly. But on pushing the pressure to create flex, you realise it can be used in a whole different manner. Will make a fine title writer for themed journals.

Please tap on the photographs below to enlarge.







wow 100 years old and still working. A day ago i purchased for myself a 35 years old made in Japan Fender Strat guitar. Of course its perfectly working and sounds absolutely astonishing. Much better than ever modern guitar 😉
LikeLiked by 2 people
Thank you for the reply. I had a 1960s Fender Jazz bass guitar and Fender Telecaster when I was in bands. Gone now and much missed really. Now? I still have my Italian Eko dreadnought acoustic from the 1960s and a recently bought Guild cherry acoustic dreadnought made in 1979 too. As you say vintage has an amazing sound. The Guild is especially precious. Still writing songs on both. Good to hear you are a musician, as well as a photographer, too. After my own heart. All the best.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Wow such great instruments – my next guitar will be an old acoustic guitar. I love old stuff. Have some 60 old cameras and of course use them 😉
LikeLiked by 1 person
Good to hear you are getting an acoustic. Just pick them up and play. No amps to set up. Vintage guitars really do rock re: the sound they produce. Your camera collection sounds impressive. I just used the basic Pentax LX and rarely the Pentax 645. Need to get earnest again with the LX. Use it more. I wonder if you follow this WordPress blog site. He has some great photographs re: vintage cameras and film use.
https://stevenlawrencepictures.com/
LikeLiked by 1 person
thank you for the recommendation. Checking !
LikeLiked by 1 person
His Diafine developer experiments with different films, pushing film, etc. are really interesting. Nice guy too. All the best.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I just found out now that I’m following him already here on WordPress. Will check his website deeper as well. I love his works. thank you
LikeLiked by 1 person
Your welcome. All the best.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Love this sooo much! Still waiting to gather more info from my uncle on his wood turning pens, but I want to start playing with this kind of stylized penmanship because I use the same kinds of swirl underlines and spirals as I write, just overall not as elegant as you!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Be good to see your future posts re: your uncle’s skills. The writing here did only take minutes to produce. Like yourself, I tend to write in a flamboyant nature. Elegance? I believe we are our own worst critics re: writing skills. Maybe born from early beginnings and watching ourselves evolve as time goes by. I suppose that means we have changed styles to seek self improvement throughout life. Calligraphy of a free flow form and expression fascinates more than the copying specific style kind. Let your own style take you to a unique place. All the best and thank you for the reply. Oh! Your last song upload link was great. I have been busy gardening recently so am not as able to keep up with catching and responding to all my fave bloggers. 😊
LikeLiked by 1 person
Ah, thank you so much about the song! I totally get not catching every favorite bloggers’ post. Bueller said it best, about “life comes at us fast” or some such thing. Ironically or synchronistically, I was just writing about a seed and it’s early beginning and the unfolding evolution/growth! Love it. Uncanny. Much gratitude!
LikeLiked by 1 person
That is a very interesting lever design, can’t say as I am familar with it. Might I suggest you reach out to Deb at Goodwriterspens’s Blog. She was refurbishing pens for decades, but has retired. She is open to answering questions and specializes on British pens. I imagine she may have stumbled across something like this. Good luck
LikeLiked by 1 person
Hi Danny. The lever design on the Blackbird being the same as the Typhoo pen was only realised today. I know of Deb and follow the site. I shall make enquiries. I have read a few of her uploads and recently read about the Typhoo pen, which was a really valuable insight, on a site too. I believe they are a conundrum re: sourcing who were responsible for making them. I made a comment and the reply stated that, apparently, the black ones are harder to find nowadays. I flushed it a fair few times and then it seemed to settle more. Enjoy writing with it now. Thanks for the info re: Deb. All the best.
LikeLiked by 1 person