The pen is mightier than the sword!
Nikki & I hadn't had a day out in Birmingham since before Xmas and were beyond excited to meet up on Friday. We'd made plans to visit another cultural attraction but after events conspired against us I remembered The Pen Museum at the eleventh hour.
At its peak Birmingham was home to over one hundred pen factories manufacturing 10,000 varieties of pens and employing over 8,000 people with women making up over 75% of the workforce.
I love vintage packaging and how even the most mundane of everyday goods were always beautifully presented.
The female press operators were expected to produce a minimum of 14,000 nibs per day with fines incurred for less than perfect nibs and also for eating, drinking, toilet breaks and even singing during their average 12 hour working day.
The good old days? I love how places like The Pen Museum, The Coffin Works (HERE) and The Silver Factory (HERE) don't gloss over the hardships Britain's working classes endured, it's so important we're reminded of how awful the days were before Health and Safety regulations and Trade Unions.
Poor Fanny, made redundant after 71 years of service.
There's an area when you can practice your calligraphy....we'd forgotten what a mess those dip pens make of your fingers.
Nikki's far more accomplished than me, my efforts were too poor to show you!
Under the supervision of Huw, one of the museum's friendly volunteers, we were invited to have a go at making a nib from scratch.
How those women churned out 14,000 a day is beyond comprehension, Nikki nearly decapitated herself in the process.
Here's my finished nib - not bad for a beginner.
The fun continued in the dressing up area...
And we had such a laugh having our handwriting analysed by Rubina. I'm a happy-go-lucky, lackadaisical optimist and Nikki's a religious, glass half-empty type.
The Pen Museum is housed within a former pen factory, built in 1863 on Frederick Street.
Open Thursday, Friday and Saturday from 11am - 4pm and on Sunday from 12pm - 4pm.
Website HERE
The gift shop is fantastic, neither of us could resist the Anti-Satanic fridge magnet. All visitors get a complimentary nib to take away, too (as well as being allowed to keep the one we made!)
Admission is £7.95 for adults (concessions available) and we were very excited to find out that visitors are eligible for a 10% discount in the pub over the road!
The 1000 Trades* is a gorgeously atmospheric former bag factory with an exciting choice of real ales and an array of Posh Sandwiches (menu here).
*During the Industrial Revolution Birmingham was known as the city of a thousand trades.
We opted for onion bhaji sandwiches with pints of IPA, just the job on such a bitterly cold day.
Our museum entrance fee did allow us to return after lunch but after a couple of beers and a chinwag it was time to head back to New Street Station dodging the commuters and the madness of rush hour.
Thanks for a fab day out, bab....see you soon!
Your light hearted recap, but highlighting the brutal reality of "the good old days" is a knack. Every one and every place has a story. I need more field trips in my life...8 weeks until my days are more open. I'm sure we have hidden gems in my back yard as well. Nice nib ( that's sounds so funny reading it back.)
ReplyDeleteThanks so much, Sam. It's so important to remember the terrible conditions the working classes and their children had to endure in order to make the British Empire so wealthy and powerful. I'd have hated to have been poor! X
DeleteWhat a fantastic morning. And you suit your new head gear.
ReplyDeleteI don't think I would have made much as a Press Operator. At work, I'm constantly eating, drinking and singing :)
We said the same, Jules, we'd end up owing the factory money with all the fines we'd rack up! X
DeleteHello, Vix,
ReplyDeleteThank you for this guided tour of the Pen Museum! How difficult life was for women in those days, times have changed but women still have a lot to complain about! Changing the subject, your look doesn't go unnoticed anywhere, you look like a snow goddess with a mix of South American tribe! You look beautiful woman!
Your posts always end with good food, food that doesn't mean anything to me, I suffer from food intolerances and there are few things I can eat! Happy Sunday!
Thanks so much, Marisa! Times were very hard for working women back then, weren't they? They weren't even allowed to vote..madness!
DeleteIt must be horrible to have food allergies, I'm sorry for tormenting you with those photos. X
Looks an interesting place to visit! The number of times we've passed this place when driving through the jewellery quarter and said we must go in there one of the days! Well you've certainly enticed me with your virtual tour Vicky, so it's on our to do list next time we're over that wayš
ReplyDeleteIt's well with a visit. Initially I thought it might be a bit childish but there really is something for all ages! X
DeleteSorry, didn't mean to be anonymous (must have clicked the wrong button). It's Sue!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Sue! X
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ReplyDeleteA great exhibition. Packaging used to be much prettier than it is today.
I wish that cosmetic items would be packaged again like they were for 70 or 80 years.
You both looked sensational
I'd love cosmetics to be packaged like they used to, those metal lipstick canisters were particularly lovely! X
DeleteHard to picture all of this while looking at an ink pen today. This museum captures more than the process, but the who and the obvious very young operators that helped make someone very rich, while spending their lifetime in a very dangerous environment. Still very interesting and enlightening to see and think back of how it must have been. Thank you for sharing your day with us. Ranee
ReplyDeleteThanks, Ranee! There was a framed quote from one of the Birmingham factory owners saying how ball point pens were a gimmick and how they'd never catch on...
DeleteAs an admirer of elegant penmanship, I envy you this extraordinarily interactive museum adventure! May we anticipate that Kinky Mellon price tags will soon display an extra flourish? * Confess that my experiments in calligraphy have been limited to shorthand characters written vertically with a Sharpie.
ReplyDeleteI'm quite tempted to book for one of the calligraphy classes the museum offers once a month, it would be £12.50 well spent and would certainly add a flourish to the Kinky Melon price tags! X
DeleteYou probably made young Huw's day! The pair of you look like you just stepped out of the pages of Vintage Vogue!!!you certainly brighten up the dullest of days!Poor Fanny! I hope she amassed a little fortune for herself before she was so cruelly let go! The Quink ink reminds me of exam days!
ReplyDeleteAwwww, thank you! Xx
DeleteI didn't know that such a museum existed... another one down on my list!
ReplyDeleteWhat a hard life it was then. Grateful for unions and health and safety legislation.
I went to the Wellcome Institute on Friday. Always worth a visit if you're in London. They also have a fantastic reading room, which is magical.
Hello Amanda! The Pen Museum, Silver Factory and Coffin Factory are all within a few yards of each other so doable in a day, well worth a day trip to Brum! X
DeleteDefinitely worth a day trip I think! I've only actually been to Birmingham once and that was to see Moby!
Deletehaving been to the toy museum in munich (a wonderful collection of teddy bears), this museum would be right up my alley. like you i can't even imagine making 14000 nibs a day -- talk about skilled labor especially for a time when there was little mechanization. and then to think that there were a hundred pen factories at one time just in birmingham. and to see the brands of different inks that are still available today. this was so fun. the posh sandwiches are a delight to read and now i want one!!!
ReplyDeletekirsten
Hello Kirsten! I'd love to see the toy museum in Munich, I bet there's some fantastic dolls houses in there!
DeleteThose posh sandwiches were so good and so big I struggled to finish mine! X
Onion bhaji sandwiches and lots of vintage packaging. What a great day out. As for those incredibly hard-working women and girls, how they had the stamina to keep going! I bet they were lumbered with housework when they got home too. It always maddens me when people talk airily about how 'women didn't work in the old days'. Ha! Working class women have always worked, and usually underpaid. Val x
ReplyDeleteIt was fabulous, the pub discount made it all the better! Yes, a working class woman's lot wasn't a happy one. I think I'd have had to flirt with the boss in the hope of him marrying me and giving me a life of luxury! X
DeleteI would love to visit. I am such a stationary hound. It’s so unique over here . It’s like an art all on its own. I ate a ramen combini sandwich the other day at work . Yes it exists and it’s as bad as it sounds!!!
ReplyDeleteIt's worth visiting for the gift shop alone! Pot Noodle sandwiches were a student hangover cure in the 1980s, I never tried one, it just sounded wrong! X
DeleteAh yes, the 'good old days', Thank goodness for Trade Unions, I'm still a member of mine, even though I'm retired.
ReplyDeleteI've been to the Coffin Works but not the Pen Museum. It looks brilliant!
We have a branch of 1000 Trades down in Lightwoods Park. It's not quite as good as the Jewellery Quarter one. Still, it's nice to have somewhere a bit classy within walking distance š xxx
Hello Annie! Jon's been a member of the Musicians Union since he was a teenager, they've really fought for him over the years. I didn't know there was another 1000 Trades, it's such a cool place. Xx
DeleteI love that fur hat on you…it’s fabulous! Sounds like a wonderful place…I adore vintage packaging, too.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Stephenie! xxx
DeleteBirmingham definitely seems to have its fair share of fascinating museums! I too love vintage packaging, and I think we must have a couple of vintage ink bottles, and even one or two boxes of vintage pen nibs here at Dove Cottage. Jos's youngest daughter swears by vintage pen nibs for her artwork!
ReplyDeleteNikki didn't do a bad job at calligraphy, but I'm sure my fingers would be similar to yours if I gave it a try. We used dip pens in the the first couple of years of primary school and they were the bane of my life!
I wonder what they'd make of my handwriting! xxx
I thought I'd seen some ink bottles when you've shared your collection, Ann! I love how even the cheap throwaway things like those steel nibs and ink bottles were so beautifully presented. I'd forgotten how much using those dip pens improve handwriting, Jos's daughter is clever using them in her art. xxx
DeleteYou have so many museums and places of interest close to your home! You and your friend looked glamorous - I loved her inviable outfit. I remember learning 'scriptures' at infant school where we wrote best neatest joind up writing with a fountain pen and had a little white ink well in the wooden desk! Betty
ReplyDeleteWe are so lucky, Betty! Mind you, we had to take to the streets at the weekend to protest about proposals to close down our local museum. Its so important to remember our industrial heritage.
DeleteI felt so grown up the first time I was allowed to graduate from a pencil to a fountain pen at school! xxx
What a fascinating little place. That would definitely feed my pen obsession! It must have been fun trying to make your own nib. Awful to think how hard it was in those factories. It would have been a human rights field day in those places, thank heaven we’ve moved on, mostly. Looks like a great day out Vix, and you always look so glam. I spent Saturday in a giant rain coat hiding from the rain. Xx
ReplyDeleteYou would have gone berserk in the gift shop, Louise! The dip pens and nibs were so cheap. If I hadn't had a reminder of how inky my fingers got after using those pens I'd have probably bought a couple.
DeleteYou always look fabulous, I bet you rocked that raincoat! xxx
What an awesome day out - if you secretly keep aTop 10 list then might this be on it?
ReplyDeleteThe packaging and detail which went into the marketing of the nibs is awesome. The work conditions horrific by our standards
It was great fun. I was a bit worried that it might be a bit kid-centric but it was perfect for everyone and the discount voucher for the pub opposite was the icing on the cake! xxx
DeleteWhat an interesting and fascinating museum. I love the chance you had to try making a nib. 14,000 a day! No singing or loo breaks, gosh people worked so hard back in the day. Thank goodness for Trade Unions. Fab post!
ReplyDeleteIt dies sound like a miserable existence, doesn't it? It took me about 10 minutes to make a solitary nib and the stap was distinctly wonky. I'd have been fined for that! xxx
DeleteThis sounds like a really fun and interesting time out and about. I had no idea about the connection with the industrial era and pens!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Molly! x
DeleteHow interesting what you tell us about the production of feathers in Birmingham, the Pen museum looks entertaining, thanks for sharing with us your time there.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Rebecca! x
DeleteIt was shut when I walked past, so it's fab to see it through your eyes. Looks another amazing place to visit. Arilx
ReplyDeleteDefinitely one for your list next time you're in our neck of the woods! xxx
DeleteWhat a fascinating place. I well remember writing with a wooden pen with a steel nib and ink in an inkwell in handwriting class in primary school. We graduated to fountain pens by grammar school and I remember the thrill of ink cartridges, then cartridges with different coloured inks. I still love a fountain pen to write with!
ReplyDeletexxx
Fountain pens make such a difference to handwriting, don't they? Mine looks so sloppy when i use a ballpoint! xxx
DeleteI MUST VISIT!!!! Sounds my ideal museum - reminds me of Basel Paoer Museum! X
ReplyDeleteIt's brilliant! xxx
DeleteLove seeing this pen museum!
ReplyDeleteI had to relearn cursive when I started working in schools in BIH as all official school documents have to be written in cursive and ink. In Croatia it's all digital now, but in Herzegovina it's still old fashion record keeping.