3/24/2026

Nostalgia - Memories of writing

A while ago, an American friend and I started talking about school memories. The starting point had been my mentioning that my handwriting had seriously deteriorated since I mostly wrote things by hand that only I needed to be able to read and that I wanted to go back to my fountain pen, mostly for letters, after I have been neglecting it lately.

From the fountain pen we got to differences in our school systems (of course I can't list all of them here).
Something that never ceases to surprise me when I see it in a TV show or a movie are pencils in US schools. Not that we didn't use pencils of course, but not for as long and not as much and definitely not in tests. As far as I know, pencils are still not allowed in tests here.
The following is such an American picture to me (as I don't know which other countries also use pencils). I honestly can't remember if I ever did a multiple choice test in school at all. From what I read and heard they are still hardly used in German schools, but you find them at universities.

Picture by Nguyen Dang Hoang Nhu via Unsplash

I can't remember for sure in which class we started learning to use a fountain pen in the early 70s, but at first we had a plastic slate and a white pencil like the ones in the picture. The times of real slates and slate pencils were already over then.
These are not my original slates, I found them at the fleamarket (as you can clearly tell from the condition) and the pencils are new. Much to my surprise both plastic slates and pencils are still available and are also still used, mostly in the first class. I guess this old dinosaur had expected kids to start writing on tablets right away these days 
😉
If you wrote on a slate that was still wet, your handwriting would get all fat and "creamy". I doubt I was the only kid ever playing around with that effect, but it was discouraged because it wore the pencil down more quickly.

Surprise - cursive writing is not all the same everywhere and
at all times. This is how I learned it in the olden days.
 

The back - either with squares for numbers or empty for drawing.
As you can see, I'm a pro in both.

I found quite a bit of debate online on German pages about when to start teaching children how to use a fountain pen. There are even some schools - although they really seem to be the minority - that start in the first class, others let children use the slate for some things, but also paper with a pencil, then a rollerball, and the fountain pen follows in second or third class. "Ink killers" are usually not allowed.
My father had bought my first fountain pen for me and even got it engraved with my name which made it really special for me as my name was never on anything, due to its spelling.

It was a red "Pelikano" and I hadn't been aware that the red color - which was meant to appeal to the girls more than the blue one - had only been sold since September 1970 which was when I started school. I wouldn't be surprised if it's still tucked away somewhere here, but it wasn't fit for writing anymore. Should I find it, I'll add a picture.

In my time, you either had a Pelikan or a Geha pen (both German brands at the time) and you defended it to the death. The death of the fountain pen, I mean. Seriously, you can still read accounts of throwing matches to determine which brand was better! Less violent was arguing about the colors (Pelikano blue or red, later also black, Geha green) or about the fact that the Geha was the first one to have a viewing window (which I still find ugly because it disturbs the flow of the pen for me and yes, I know I'm talking about a "school pen") and a reserve tank.
I can't remember any matches in my own class, but there was a certain rivalry. Don't forget, we are talking about elementary school kids here.

While those two certainly made up the bulk of pupils' pens at the time, though, there were other brands as well, my sister for example had an Artus Prinz.
All of them had cartridges, I don't think I knew anyone who still used an inkwell then. You could use the Pelikan cartriges in a Geha, by the way, but not the Geha ones in the Pelikano. Pff. Made the Geha kids feel so special, but they gladly borrowed cartridges from us if theirs were empty 
😉
I also remember my English pen pal sending me some cartridges, but I couldn't use them because they were too long. I don't know anymore what kind of pen they were meant for.

These days I use a Parker. I'm not a fan of fat ballpoint or fountain pens to write with (but sometimes to look at) and have always preferred the feel of a slim Parker in my hand.
It has a cartridge/converter filling system and I use a converter with ink bottles. It reminds me of my teenage days when my friend and I hung out at the office supply store (I wrote about us buying sealing wax there before which is part of my writing memories, but I don't want to repeat myself here). They had Pelikan ink bottles back then with different colors of ink. I have always enjoyed writing in other colors even in school and back then I wanted all of those bottles so badly - those expensive little bottles, sigh.
Nowadays I'm much more sensible and know how to limit myself meaning I only got "Intense Black" and "Tender Purple". Eight years ago! I only ever used my fountain pen for scribbling a short thank you when I sent off one of my jewelry pieces or on rare cards I wrote. Now that I have pen pals again, I finally have an excuse to buy more.
There's just one problem with ink and me, especially when I'm filling my Parker. I'm terrible at it. The last time I had to walk around with two nails rimmed in purple for three days because the ink just wouldn't scrub off! A small price to pay for being elegant enough to use an inkwell 
😂

My handwriting has changed just a tad. At least
it's a little better with a fountain pen than a ballpoint.

For some extra nostalgia I'll show you how we learned to read and spell in my time. This so-called "Lese-Uhr" = "reading clock" was made by a local manufacturer for "learning aids and school games", E. Kuhlemann.


There were several versions over the years, but I can't tell you the time period when they were actually used in school (it ended sometime in the 70s, though, as my (not so) little brother didn't use it) or where exactly, but from a talk about them I know it was definitely not in all of Germany - different states, different rules - but also not just in my state.
I could already read when I started school, so I don't remember how helpful the clock actually was, but we did have fun with it.


This was the one I had. Blue plastic with
print letters. It's the one that is still rather
easy to find today, usually in quite good
condition and even with the original paper
jacket which had instructions how to use it.

I had only seen this one in museum pictures
for years, it's the older cardboard version
(which belonged to a school, there's a stamp
and inventory number). There are a few
differences from the newer one, like the
colored letters for example or the cover picture. 


This is a newer version with cursive
letters. There's no jacket, but two sheets
with explanations and exercises for the
teacher with synthetic teaching methods.

There were also big ones for the teachers which came in both cursive and print letters as well.

Picture via Wikipedia by Pomona under CC BY-SA 3.0,
taken at Museum Schönholthausen in Finnentrop 

Saarländisches Schulmuseum
This one is almost 3 feet high and made from
hardboard and coated cardboard.


And of course I have to end this post with my wax seal ... For those who hadn't seen it yet, do you recognize the image?

16 comments:

  1. Your wax steal is lovely! Your post is making me think about my own school days. I don't think we used pencils either!

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    1. Thank you! I hope the post brought up some good school memories.

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  2. Oooh! What wonderful memories, thank you for sharing them!

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  3. Oh, this was fascinating! We couldn’t even use ink pens of any kind until fifth grade. I’m not sure what that equates to for you, but I was around eleven. And, then, they had to be blue ink only. I remember discovering the joys of a fountain pen and went through so many cartridges. But, I was an anomaly rather than the norm. Those reading wheels have me intrigued. I bet they would have been invaluable when I was a special education teacher. Isn’t it interesting how differently education was approached…well, probably still is…in different parts of the world? Thanks for the lesson, Cat!

    https://marshainthemiddle.com/

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    1. Yes, I think education is really very different across the world, maybe even more so now as there are so many possibilites.
      We were allowed to use different inks as long as it wasn't red because the teachers used red for marking tests. There were teachers who didn't like the colored ones, though.
      I think the reading clocks (and I always wondered why they called it clock, just because it was round?) would also be fun for children before school. I don't remember if you could only buy them via the school, though.

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  4. Ah, well that first photo is a test that is scored by an (old!) computer and we had to use #2 lead pencils as that was the only medium the machine read. You also had to make sure to fill in the bubble fully and completely and erase any answers you changed completely lest the computer score the page wrong. However, other than taking electronic tests, we were only allowed to use pencils in math from like elementary school on, all other work had to be done in either blue or black ink.

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    1. That's interesting, thank you, Joanne! I think at the time only blue and black ink was permanent, but I seem to remember I saw there are other colors from some manufacturers now that are also supposed to be permanent.

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  5. What a great post. Thank you for sharing your memories.

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  6. This was fascinating! I had no idea that pencils in school were an American thing!

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    1. Thank you!
      There may be a lot of countries I haven't come across that do it, too. We are not one of them, though.
      It would be fun to hear more people chime in on that.

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  7. Oh gosh...we weren't even allowed to use such fancy pens in high school. I, in fact, have never used a fountain pen. They scare me. lol! I just use store bought ones..Sharpe brand with a fine-point and gel ink. Always black for some reason. Pencils were definitely what we used but I didn't like them because they always faded.

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    1. What scares you about them (serious question)? If you have one with a good flow and good paper with it, it can be so satisfying. I only make a mess because I'm not using cartridges and I'm used to have two inky fingers after writing with one.
      But everything you feel good with - ink rollers, pencils, crayons, whatever - is fine of course!

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  8. I'm pretty sure we used pencils then fountain pens. Parkers for us and I still have one (well, a new one) but I also like Lamy. I get in SUCH a mess when I fill my pens, in fact I was embarrassed only the other day as a councillor candidate dropped some leaflets off for me to deliver and I had blue ink all over my hands (fancy blue ink in a nice colour, not just plain blue!). I love using different colour inks although I keep most of them upstairs and stick to one bottle at a time at the moment. I have the Parker and a Lamy with a medium nib, and I really write best with them. I love your European writing: I remember when I had a French penfriend and realised with delight that she wrote in the same way as boards and menus in French restaurants and hotels were written!

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    1. How funny! I'm glad I'm not the only one, I really started to doubt myself about the inky fingers!
      I love seeing different handwriting. A former colleague of mine had the clearest handwriting ever. I don't know if they did that in the UK as well, but in her time it seems they still taught "library penmanship" although catalog cards were not handwritten anymore at the time. However, she said she was sorry that her writing never looked individual.

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