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Pencil
A
pencil is a handheld instrument containing an interior strip
of solid material that produces marks used to write and
draw, usually on paper. The marking material is most commonly
graphite, typically contained inside a wooden sheath. However,
other marking materials are used, such as charcoal or cosmetics
(as in an eyebrow pencil). Colored pencils employ pigments,
including those used in oil and watercolor paints. Pencils
may also have an eraser or "rubber" attached to
one end, typically by means of a metal ferrule. Unlike pencils,
pens use a liquid marking material, ink.
History
Simple
pencils.The prototypical pencil may have been the ancient
Roman stylus, which was a thin metal stick, often made of
lead and used for scratching on papyrus. The word pencil
comes from the Latin word penicillus which means "little
tail".
Some
time prior to 1565 (some sources say as early as 1500),
an enormous deposit of graphite was discovered at the site
of Seathwaite Fell near Borrowdale, Cumbria, England. The
locals found that it was very useful for marking sheep.
This
particular deposit of graphite was extremely pure and solid
and it could easily be sawed into sticks. This was and remains
the only deposit of graphite ever found in this solid form.
Chemistry was in its infancy and the substance was thought
to be a form of lead. Consequently it was called plumbago
(Latin for "acts like lead"). The black core of
pencils is still called "lead", even though it
does not contain the element lead.
The
value of plumbago was soon realised to be enormous, mainly
because it could be used to line the moulds for cannon balls,
and the mines were taken over by the Crown and guarded.
Graphite had to be smuggled out for use in pencils. Because
the plumbago was soft, it required some form of case. Plumbago
sticks were at first wrapped in string or in sheepskin for
stability. The news of the usefulness of these early pencils
spread far and wide, attracting the attentions of artists
all over the known world.
Although
deposits of graphite had been found in other parts of the
world, they were not of the same purity and quality as the
Borrowdale find, and had to be crushed to remove the impurities,
leaving only graphite powder. England continued to enjoy
a monopoly on the production of pencils until a method of
reconstituting the graphite powder was found. The distinctively
square English pencils continued to be made with sticks
cut from natural graphite into the 1860s. Today, the town
of Keswick, near the original findings of block graphite,
has a pencil museum. The first attempt to manufacture graphite
sticks from powdered graphite was in Nuremberg, Germany
in 1662. They used a mixture of graphite, sulfur and antimony.
Though usable they were inferior to the English pencils.
It
was the Italians who first thought of wooden holders. An
Italian couple in particular named Simonio and Lyndiana
Bernacotti were believed to be the ones to create the first
blueprints for the modern carpentry pencil for the cause
of being able to mark their carpentry pieces, however, their
version was instead a flat oval, more compact type of pencil.
They did this at first by hollowing out a stick of juniper
wood. Shortly thereafter, a superior technique was discovered:
two wooden halves were carved, a plumbago stick inserted,
and the two halves then glued together-essentially the same
method that is in use to this day.
English
and German pencils were not available to the French during
the Napoleonic wars. It took the efforts of an officer in
Napoleon's army to change this. In 1795 Nicholas Jacques
Cont? discovered a method of mixing powdered graphite with
clay and forming the mixture into rods which were then fired
in a kiln. By varying the ratio of graphite to clay, the
hardness of the graphite rod could also be varied (the more
clay, the harder the pencil, and the lighter the color of
the mark). This method of manufacture remains in use today.
America
colonists imported pencils from Europe until after the American
Revolution. Benjamin Franklin advertised pencils for sale
in his Pennsylvania Gazette in 1729, and George Washington
used a three-inch pencil when he surveyed the Ohio Territory
in 1762.
It
is said that William Munroe, a cabinetmaker in Concord,
Massachusetts, made the first American wood pencils in 1812.
If so, this was not the only pencil-making in Concord. According
to Henry Petroski, transcendentalist philosopher Henry David
Thoreau discovered how to make a good pencil out of inferior
graphite using clay as the binder; this invention was prompted
by his father's pencil factory in Concord, which employed
graphite found in New Hampshire in 1821 by Charles Dunbar.
Shape Of Pencils
Most
pencils today are hexagonal in cross-section. This shape
is comfortable to hold, the pencil will come to a stop if
rolling on a desk, and less wood is wasted in manufacturing
than with a round pencil. Carpenter's pencils have a flattened
shape, which also will not roll, and allows for a more precise
positioning of the line drawn.
Color Of Pencils
Pencils
in the United States and Canada tend to be painted yellow
on the outside. According to Henry Petroski, this tradition
now extends to a majority of pencils worldwide, and began
in 1890 when the L. & C. Hardtmuth Company of Austria-Hungary
introduced their Koh-I-Noor brand, named after the famous
diamond. It was intended to be the world's best and most
expensive pencil, and at a time when most pencils were either
painted in dark colors or not at all, the Koh-I-Noor was
yellow.
As
well as simply being distinctive, the color may have been
inspired by the Austro-Hungarian flag; it was also suggestive
of the Orient, at a time when the best-quality graphite
came from Siberia. Other companies then copied the yellow
color so that their pencils would be associated with this
high-quality brand, and chose brand names with explicit
Oriental references, such as Mikado and Mongol.
Not
all countries however use yellow pencils; German pencils,
for example, are often green, based on the trademark colors
of Faber-Castell, a major German stationary company.
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