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1935 French Ad Jif Waterman Fountain Pen Ink Lithograph - ORIGINAL ILL1

1935 French Ad Jif Waterman Fountain Pen Ink Lithograph - ORIGINAL ILL1

Regular price $57.95 USD
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This is an original 1935 two-color French lithograph ad for the Jif Waterman Fountain Pen.

CONDITION

This 76+ year old Item is rated Very Fine. No creases. No natural defects. No tears. No water damage. There is some light aging and surface rub --please see image.

  • Product Type: Original Print Ad; Other
  • Grade: Very Fine
  • Dimensions: Approximately 11 x 15 inches; 28 x 38 cm
  • Authentication: Serial-Numbered Certificate of Authenticity w/ Full Provenance
  • Protection: Packaged in a custom archival sleeve with an acid-free black board (great for display, gift-giving, and preservation)

Waterman's Fountain Pen.

Inventor Lewis Waterman, of New York, began his career as an insurance broker. The legend goes that while Waterman was meeting with an important client, the pen he was using leaked all over a critical document that was to be signed by the client. Upon Waterman's return, after attempting to retrieve a new document, he found the client had signed with another broker. This chain of events led to Waterman designing fountain pens in his brother's workshop, and eventually selling them out of a cigar shop after he patented the pen in 1884. Waterman guaranteed his pens for five years, advertised in the popular magazine The Review of Review and intrigued customers soon began to place orders for Waterman's fountain pens. Upon Waterman's death in 1901, his nephew Frank D. Waterman took over the business, increasing sales substantially, and the company became internationally-known for its quality and reliability.

Early Waterman pens had 14K gold nibs that provided smoothness and flexibility; the rest of the pen was made out of hard rubber. The #42 retracting-nib safety pen, #52 screw-cap lever-filler and #12 slip-cap eyedropper were common models.

Incredible Fact:

Perhaps the company's biggest claim to fame was the solid gold Waterman pen that was used in signing the Treaty of Versailles.

Copyright 2016, Period Paper LLC

Keywords specific to this image: Vintage Advertising

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