There are, as is well known, two types of
people in the world: those who find stationery (with an ‘e’ for envelope)
endlessly fascinating - and those that don’t.
I am, enthusiastically and terminally, in
the first category.
One can speculate about how such fixations
develop, and I have thought back to my childhood, and I think that I can see
the reasons that I am how I am.
My first ‘remembered’ pocket money was 6d
(sixpence in old money or 2½p in the ‘new’)
even in those distant days that was not much.
It would have bought me 24 blackjacks, 6 chews or one and a bit sherbet
fountains: and it had to last a week.
This is where the lure of stationery comes in. You could buy drawing pins or paper clips
with part of your money and you got lots of ‘things’. You didn’t ever use them all, but it was a
real example of plenty for not very much.
Like staples.
Not every six or seven year-old would ask for a stapler for Christmas
- but I did. And I got one too (my
parents probably delighted that a childish wish could be fulfilled at such
little expense!) they may have been delighted, but it could not possibly match
my ecstasy on owning a grey, sleek, official-looking piece of grown-up
machinery. There was not, it must be admitted,
a whole stack of papers that I needed to staple, but the fact that I could if I
needed to was the point. And the further
point is that a stapler needs staples, and for a very small outlay you could
get a thousand of them. A thousand!
It was the same with notebooks: lots of pages for small amounts. It almost seemed a pity to have to write in
them. Which, again if I am fair, I
seldom did. It was the ownership of
flickable blank pages that really mattered.
As I grew older I was able to rationalise my addiction into defined
‘necessity’: I needed folders for schoolwork.
And clips. And pens. And rubbers.
And Tippex. And so it went on.
Any new system for stationery organization or display had my
attention. The different folders that I purchased usually had differing configurations of holes for the paper - and
that necessitated the purchase of hole punches, and then the purchase of those
paper Polos that you stuck around the holes to stop the paper from tearing
through over use.
From where I sit typing this I can see two domestic paper guillotines
to my right; behind me is a long arm stapler purloined from my last school (with the full knowledge of the senior management team); on a shelf in front, the thermal binder is next to the ring binder;
further along is the plastificator, with A4, A5 and card sized plastic sleeves; there is a printer within arm’s reach, to say nothing of the serious table-mounted guillotine that can slice through 500 pages at once.
I have enough pens and pencils (for which, incidentally I have an
electric sharpener) to supply a school; I have various small staplers (with
staples) and a staple remover; I have post-it notes in many sizes and colours;
I have stickers (both festive and plain); plastic rulers, metal rulers,
cutters, tape dispensers, Dymo machines (manual and electric) and a bewildering
array of magnifying glasses.
I am insatiable in my need for aspects of the stationeryatorial
possibilities - even if I have nowhere to put my acquisitions and struggle to
find a use for those I already have. But I don’t smoke
and so I am ‘allowed’ a minor aberration or three.
As with watches (I will go into that in another post) I am
searching. Searching for perfection. In this case the perfect pen.
I much prefer to write with ink through a fountain pen nib and, over
the years, Parker, Montblanc and Sheaffer have been purchased and gifted to
me. And I have lost the lot. Some blotty biros stay with me for years, but
give me a decent fountain pen and it will be lost before the ink cartridge
empties!
I eventually found a solution that met my inky needs and my propensity
to mislay, by discovering the pre-filled disposable fountain pen. A wasteful extravagance, but one that I embraced. The nib was a good match for my scribbled
writing and seemed to be able to cope with my destructive scrawl through the
length of the reservoir of ink, and the smallish cost of the thing meant that it didn’t
really matter if I lost it. This
attitude of course encouraged me to buy the things in relative bulk so that I
could, as it were, go on finding the ‘lost’ pens in a continuous serendipitous
discovery process, before they too were lost in the never ending cycle of my
stationery life.
Which brings me to Lidl, or possibly Aldi, but certainly one or the
other. Catalonia, unlike the UK, does
not start putting out the ‘Back to School’ merchandise on the first day of the
summer holiday, they wait until the calendar indicates that it is only a
despairing teacher’s scream away from the start of term. So, it was in early September that I noted a
matched set of pen, roller ball and packet of ink cartridges set out alluringly
in one of those impossible to breach plastic bump packs. “Why not?”, I thought rhetorically, and put
one in my basket.
It was only when I got home that I discovered that the design on the
barrel of each of the writing instruments, that I had thought to be vaguely
Orientally inspired, was actually an open, monster’s claw. I am going to continue using it in the
expectation that other people will, like me, take the graphic to be bamboo
rather than something else beginning with the letter ‘b’ related to the
gruesome that I can’t think of.
As I am wise in the ways of ink cartridge fountain pens, I knew that
while one cartridge was feeding the nib, an extra cartridge should be able to
be fitted into the empty space of the barrel.
And it could and was.
I then turned to the rollerball.
And it didn’t work. And it
continued not to work even after some vigorous flicking to get the ink to
flow. Disgruntled I dismantled the pen
to find that there was nothing inside. I
mean there was no refill there. Nothing. I then realised that the thing actually used
the cartridges supplied.
This was a revelation! It is
surely a rule that the refills for rollerballs come complete with ink supply
and nib, like the refills for ballpoint pens.
But I also realised that I had never seen an ink cartridge rollerball
pen before. And I further realised that,
if a roller ball could work with an ink cartridge - why hadn’t it been done
before? Perhaps it has been done, but
for something that momentous to escape my stationery eye would be remarkable.
It must be greed.
It is said that HP printer ink is one of the most expensive liquids on
the planet. The cost of the printer machine has fallen dramatically over the
years, but that it because the companies know that they can make so much more
money by customers buying their ink. Even
a cursory exploration on the Internet about how computer printer companies
limit the life of the ink cartridge in the printers is easy to find and surely,
is little more than theft. There are,
allegedly, chips inside printers that count up the number of copies that you make
and, at a number decided by the company, the machine will begin to display
error messages urging you to buy a new cartridge, irrespective of whether you
actually need one or not, and if you do not buy a new one, then the machine
will simply stop printing.
This is yet another example of the planned obsolescence exemplified by
the light bulb. There is one electric
light bulb that has been burning continuously for over 100 years and I believe
that it had its own website and there is a camera trained on it so those with
nothing better to do can stare at a lighted lamp and think about all the light bulbs
that they have thrown away because they have ‘blown’.
It’s funny, too, isn’t it, that modern cars don’t seem to rust like they used to? New technology has nothing, or little to do with it, manufacturers have known how to make cars rustproof for years, but they got more money by ensuring that expensive welding would be needed after a certain number of years, ensuring too a continual replacement of the vehicles. And don’t get me started on coffee capsules!
It’s funny, too, isn’t it, that modern cars don’t seem to rust like they used to? New technology has nothing, or little to do with it, manufacturers have known how to make cars rustproof for years, but they got more money by ensuring that expensive welding would be needed after a certain number of years, ensuring too a continual replacement of the vehicles. And don’t get me started on coffee capsules!
In spite of these examples, and many more, that show the uncaring
nature of capitalism and the gullibility of we the consumers, I am still enthralled
to know that I now posses a roller ball that uses ink cartridges.
And, in yet another example of how the things around me don’t really
change, I couldn’t find it to get a real look at the design.
But it will turn up and it will give me pleasure when I find it. Though I may not, or indeed, ever really use
it.
But that response is the nature of addiction and I am working on it.
Sometime or other.
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But that response is the nature of addiction and I am working on it.
Sometime or other.