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  2. Jotter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jotter

    The Parker Jotter is the Parker Pen Company's second and best-selling retracting refillable ballpoint pen. The first was the Hopalong Cassidy ballpoint (Later a fountain pen, mechanical pencil and rollerball pen were introduced to the line). Since 1954, over 750 million have been sold worldwide.

  3. Quink - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quink

    It was released in 1941 as "51" ink, along with the Parker 51 pen; in 1947 it was made somewhat less corrosive, and renamed "Superchrome". Parker was careful to print prominent warnings on caps, labels, and boxes that the ink could only be used in the 51 (and, later, its economy version, the 21), and would damage any other pen.

  4. Fountain pen ink - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fountain_pen_ink

    Fountain pens carry ink within the barrel, traditionally either inserted at one end in bulk with a syringe or eyedropper pipette, or through a mechanical filling system built into the pen (such as a piston or vacuum-pump mechanism). For such fountain pens, ink is available in bottles which will typically refill an individual pen many tens of times.

  5. Parker Pen Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parker_Pen_Company

    It was a simple cylindrical plastic cap and barrel roller-ball pen called the "Parker RB1". [27] In 1984, Parker added the FP1 ("Fountain Pen 1"), with essentially the same design. The RB1 and FP1 models were produced until 1986, at which time Parker revised the pen by lengthening the cap and shortening the barrel and renaming the new pen the ...

  6. Category:Parker pens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Parker_pens

    Pages in category "Parker pens" The following 7 pages are in this category, out of 7 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. * Parker Pen Company; 0–9.

  7. Parker 51 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parker_51

    It was released in 1941 as "51" ink, along with the Parker 51 pen. Parker was careful to print prominent warnings on caps, labels, and boxes that the ink could only be used in the "51." The formulation in the ink would react with other manufacturing materials (such as celluloid) of the period leading to irreparable damage to other fountain pens.