(Caroline Foty's first fountain pen was a 1970s Sheaffer No Nonsense that still writes perfectly. Since she discovered pens by independent makers, she wants "one of each, please" and wants to meet all the makers. Maybe you do, too. She lives in Baltimore with pens, cats, and all kinds of fiber arts supplies.)
For many people, the path that leads them to make things begins before they were born. Greg Hardy, of Hardy Penwrights, spent time with his brothers in their grandfather’s workshop starting at age 6 or 7, making and fixing things. As a teenager he began carving wood and making jewelry, with a lot of inspiration from an art teacher who was skilled in and enthusiastic about Celtic art forms and uncial calligraphy. “He was the first person I ever saw who used a fountain pen – an Osmiroid that he never cleaned and ended up having to use as a dip pen.”
Despite coming into possession of his great-grandmother’s 1930s Wearever fountain pen at the age of 12 (which he is just beginning to restore), Hardy didn’t move to making pens until ten years ago, when a stressful job as a school superintendent meant he needed to spend some non-working time working with his hands, “a daily challenge to keep my head from spinning. I wanted to apply things I knew how to do in new ways.” He retired five years ago from that job and cut back to merely “seventy hours in the shop” – by which time the shop included five lathes and his son Gavin as fulltime staff. Nowadays, he generally heads into the shop at four or five in the morning, and by lunch time he’s put in an eight hour day and is ready for a nap (he’s a big believer in naps).