How the pen box has brought together my two passions in life – writing and woodworking.
A few months ago, I rediscovered an old fountain pen, a long-forgotten companion from my college days. It was a cheap Parker with a plastic body, hidden in the midst of a drawer full of odds and ends. I resurrected the pen, washed it and filled it with ink and Voila! It was as good as the day I had laid it aside. It raced across the paper; its old nib abraded to perfection for my writing style.
As I wrote, memories flooded back: College Street in the late Seventies, copying notes in the portico, long hours in the library of the economics department and hurriedly penned personal notes. Everything returned with a haunting intensity, unleashed by the opening of my old fountain pen.
I wondered why I had discarded this and a couple of other fountain pens used eons ago. The pens and a couple of bottles of ink had survived the decades despite being abandoned. The computer and cheap gel pens had rendered the fountain pens redundant. But once I started writing with the old Parker, I realized what a terrible mistake I had made. Forgotten muscle memories woke up as did a whole process of cogitation. I realized that writing with a fountain pen is more than just forming words on paper; it involves many cognitive processes, arousing somnolent parts of the brain.
These COVID-19 times were ideal for reviving old habits. I not only resurrected the few pens I had but also discovered the wonderful world of fountain pens (largely from this blog!). Nowadays with easy imports and online stores, I found it easy to procure a number of excellent – and for me, intriguing – fountain pens and some inks. I was entering into a whole new world.
I connected with some old friends to share my new found passion. Many of them, I learnt had sizeable pen collections. One of them, who is an author of several books, suggested I make a wooden pen box for his pens. My passion for making wooden boxes and clocks is no secret in my friends’ circle and I have made many items for them.
I happily agreed and got down to deciding on a simple but elegant design for a fountain pen box. As a tradition respecting person, I don’t usually turn to the Internet for design inspiration. Rather I prefer to dig into our past and try to find design traditions to base my designs. I have been aided in this process by my work that has taken to me various corners of this country and exposed me to many arts and crafts forms.
My first idea took me back to a small town in Bengal I had visited years ago. Today, it isn’t much of a town but in the past, Rajmahal was a place of great strategic importance as it stood at the entrance of Bengal where the River Ganga swings south skirting a region of hills and jungles. All invading armies normally had to enter Bengal through this route because the other routes led through thick jungles of the Chotanagpur plateau. Every Nawab stationed troops and guns at Rajmahal. The place declined as the British enforced peace throughout the Subcontinent but several old families and a few isolated mansions survived the vicissitudes of time. I had visited the place and had been shown surviving houses and artefacts. I clearly recall seeing a number of wooden objects, including boxes, almirahs and stools used in that era. These were based on colonial designs – an amalgam of European and Indian traditions.
I modified a simple design with a sliding lid, a single tray and pen rest that I recall having seen, I called this the Rajmahal Pen Box. This pen box first found its way to my author friend, who quickly filled it up with his collection. Then others demanded one too. And thus, was born a line of pen boxes which I now make and sell in small numbers. Through my website www.banerjies.in.
Another design has a regular lid but is similar to the Rajmahal Pen Box. I call this the Panagarh Pen Box after the memory of an Army officer who was once stationed at that depot near Durgapur.
Boxes are all about memories and storing things we cherish. They must be as lovely as the items that are to be stored. This was my first impulse and even today I strive to make each of my boxes as exquisite as possible, using the best woods like African Padauk, American Maple, White Ash and English Oak. The boxes are not put together by nails or screws but time-tested dovetail and similar joinery. The finish is either Shellac (French polish) or polyurethane, both painstakingly applied over several days.
The pen boxes have brought together my two passions in life – writing and woodworking. They are both wonderfully fulfilling. The fountain pen has returned to my life and I am so grateful for that. Today, I first pen my articles and then copy them into my computer. I have no need to make corrections as the process of keying it into the computer is like writing a second draft. The pen makes it faster for me to put down my thought – years of practice perhaps from my formative years. But it is a wonderful process I look forward to every morning: choosing a different pen and ink combination and filling up my journal with inconsequential things no one will ever read.
13 December 2020
(Indranil Banerjie is a freelance journalist, security risk analyst and woodworker based in Greater Noida, India. For More information: www.banerjies.in)