Meet Your Maker: Ben Stewart, Mayfair Pens

(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.)

I imagine Ben Stewart learned how to swim by diving into the deep end or leaping off a boat. When he started making pens, he had not previously learned how to use a lathe, or observed a relative working in a shop. The habit of carrying a pocket notebook around had led him to start getting into pens, but in 2021 he became aware of the wide world of good fountain pens, and was smitten. He spent a month getting engrossed in watching videos of pen makers, and talking to makers about the equipment that was needed, and then bought a lathe and jumped in. No kit pens for him.

“I was really bad at it at first. I broke a lot of things.”

A special education teacher by day, with one small child and another arriving as this article is being published, Stewart has limited shop time, so he spends more time thinking about what to make than actually making it. Combinations of materials particularly appeal to him, and over time he has curated for himself a list of his favorite materials by each material artisan.

This does not translate into a yen to make materials himself. “These folks are so talented, anything I could want is being made by someone.”

Naming his pens with words out of the world of J.R.R. Tolkien came naturally. “I’ve always been Tolkien obsessed, and big into writing and language.” Tolkien built not only worlds, but languages, offering Stewart an endless supply of names as he developed what would become eight different pen models. The name of his company came from closer to home in Virginia. “Mayfair is a part of London, but it’s also the street I grew up on. My shop is still on that street, in my dad’s garage.”

Mayfair pens have distinctive shapes that are unique to Stewart. “I tend to write with my hand further back on the pen, so threads on pens were a problem for me. I thought – what if I didn’t have threads there?” The fourth pen he successfully completed had threads in front of the section, and all eight of his models now have that construction. He nods to Jacob Pawloski of Mad Science Pens, whose quest to get rid of threads led to pen shapes with a similar vibe, but with threads inside the end of the section instead of outside. But “my pens are so unique partly because I legitimately didn’t know what I was doing, I had no preconceived notions.”

This early experimentation led to two of his eight models being eyedropper pens. “I wondered, is this a silly idea? Nobody’s going to buy this.” Stewart’s eyedropper system combines the section and barrel into one piece, like his cartridge/converter pens, and it is filled through the threaded area inside the section where the nib unit screws in. There are no threads or seams to take away from the visibility of the ink, and the barrel is most often made out of some translucent material. “I was surprised how many people like these. The feedback has been positive in terms of not leaking.” The Silmaril is a full sized eyedropper pen, and the Narya is a pocket pen that becomes full sized when the cap is posted onto threads at the end of the barrel.

With limited shop time, he tends to make pens in batches of five to sixteen units, and does monthly drops on the second Saturday at about noon. He still takes commissions, and plans to continue. “The requests fit in with what I’m already doing.” His experimental model, the Gondolin, came from a “play day” in the shop, cutting different shapes and seeing what happened.

Stewart’s goal as a pen user is to collect more pens from other makers. “I never really got into high-end pens.” He has a pen made by Tim Crowe of Turnt Pen Company that he really likes, and he is collaborating with Crowe on a limited edition of Vanyar pens inspired by Mount Doom from Lord of the Rings. The pens combine Crowe’s “Painted Desert” material with a custom orange pour. If you like orange and are lucky, there might be some left.

Pen making is both therapy and satisfaction for Stewart. “This was the first activity where I could turn an idea into a creative output, where I could think of something and turn it into a thing you can hold.” With a demanding job and a young family, the shop is “therapeutic – you can turn your brain off and create something step by step. I get energy from that. And it’s rewarding to see other people enjoy the work.”

Ben Stewart’s work can be seen at Mayfair Pen Company and on Instagram @MayfairPens, and at shows in DC and Baltimore.


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Posted on October 24, 2023 and filed under Meet Your Maker.

Hobonichi Techo Weeks MEGA 2024 Planner Giveaway

The Hobonichi Techo Weeks MEGA looks like an excellent planner plus notebook choice for 2024. The front part of the planner contains the popular two page per week layout for the full year, and the back part contains 200+ pages of classic Hobonichi graph paper. This is a great format and layout, so if you are interested in winning this Aqua Blue model read the rules below and enter away!

Posted on October 24, 2023 and filed under Hobonichi, Giveaways.

Pilot ILMILY Nuance Gel Pen Review

Very few things in my stationery life get me more excited than a gel ink pen with a fine line and a unique ink color. The Pilot ILMILY Nuance Gel Ink Pen combines those things perfectly, and packages them into a great barrel.

Review over, right? Not so fast.

As a fan of Pilot’s highly Instagramable ILMILY (I Love Me, I Love You,) product lineup, I somehow had missed the launch of the Nuance. It wasn’t until a friend included one in a care package of awesomeness to me that I tried one out, and I was immediately hooked.

That pen in question, the Nuance Black Yellow, made me giddy. As I alluded to up top, an 0.5 mm gel ink pen, and in a color as weird as Black Yellow, really gets me going. It wrote well, and the barrel was cool and comfortable. Immediately, I asked, “Are there more?”

Yes, Brad, there are more. Many more.

One of the fun ideas I’ve seen pen companies tackle over the past several years is the idea of “Black+” ink formulations. My all-time favorite is Uni-ball’s Signo DX in Lavender Black (0.38 mm please, and thank you.) Uni-ball expanded on that idea with their BLX formulation in other pen lineups, and brands like Pentel and Sakura dabble in a more limited capacity. These colors take the very business-like black ink formulation and add a hint of other colors to the mix.

Pilot took that “hint” of added color directly into the product name of this lineup. The colors are nuanced on the page, often requiring closer inspection to see the alternate shade come through. They are there, to be sure, but set your expectations accordingly.

In my writing samples, I made sure to mix in the Black ink of the Pilot G2 0.5 mm pen as a baseline. The Nuance lineup also has a Black-only ink pen, but I wasn’t compelled to purchase that one. I did purchase the remainder of the colors, minus Black Brown, which was simply an oversight on my part.

The beauty of these inks is that you can get away with using them in settings where Black ink is the expectation. You and I can have our little secret, ok? I think Black Red and Black Yellow have the most noticeable undertones, and therefore are my favorites. Black Green is the least interesting, and Black Blue and Black Violet land in the middle. Other brands do those combinations better.

It’s almost impossible to see through a computer screen, but the writing order is Pilot G2 Black, Nuance Black Blue, Black Violet, Black Red, Black Green, Black Yellow, and then back to the Black G2 down the page.

If you know what to expect going in to the ILMLIY Nuance series, you will be happy with the results. That is, if you want to pay over $4 per pen. That is at the top of the price range for a gel ink pen, but that is where Pilot has placed this premium brand. At that price I can’t recommend the entire set, but if you like them, pick out one or two of the more interesting colors. Or, pro tip, grab the refills for half the price and use them in Pilot G2 compatible pens. Taps forehead.

I’m glad the Pilot ILMILY series exists. Yes, it is premium priced, but it gives them a platform to experiment outside of their normal product lineups. I’m always for that.

(JetPens provided this product at no charge to The Pen Addict for review purposes.)


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Posted on October 23, 2023 and filed under Pilot, ILMILY, Gel, Pen Reviews.