As the manager of an educational program promoting home health and safety to families with children, Rich Paul needed to communicate that even the smallest irregularity can have unforeseen consequences. Then, of course, the pandemic intervened, and Rich suffered one of those unforeseen consequences due to the program's loss of funding. After the pandemic, he was reinstated as a food safety program manager that evaluates new restaurant plans. In a restaurant, a single source of bacteria can contaminate the entire kitchen, so Rich and his team anticipate lurking problems.
Rich has always enjoyed working with his hands. For years he exhibited at crafts shows, having made everything from six-pack beer carriers to bowls to trays. His work in wood sold well. A friend suggested he try making pens.
In Rich's own words, "I had zero interest in making a pen." It would mean buying more equipment and a significant change to his workflow.
One day that friend showed up at lunchtime, brought his small lathe, and set it up in Rich's workshop. When Rich made that first pen, he was immediately hooked. Several weeks later, Rich bought his first lathe and began producing kit pens, which he sold at regional art shows. Business looked promising, especially after he began making pens of his own design in varied materials. In December 2018, he established River City Pen Company, primarily offering custom pens. In April 2020, he planned to exhibit at the Atlanta Pen Show, his first, but the COVID lockdowns intervened. Always an optimist, Rich created a website and began selling online. Four years later, his Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania-based River City Pen Company is thriving.
After settling on pen making, Rich felt his identity was liberated. His company's name seemed to reflect this new attitude: he was no longer a general woodworker, he was a pen maker.
Bu hikaye PEN WORLD dergisinin June 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye PEN WORLD dergisinin June 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
Remembering Ward Dunham (October 11, 1941 - August 24, 2024)
On August 24, 2024, calligrapher Ward Dunham passed away.
The Black Pen Society and the D.C. Pen Show: Poobah in a Flower Pot
Do you like black pens? If so, you are probably already familiar with the fun, frivolity, and fellowship associated with the Black Pen Society (BPS).
Stationery Fest: This Is Not a Pen Show
Daisy and Neil Ni's twist on the traditional pen show is about community, not commerce.
"It Has Style:" A History of the Aurora Hastil (1969-1970)
The Italian pen company's experiment in modernism led to a revolution in late 20th century pen design. A two-part series.
GW Pens Scores a Critical Hit
With new collections inspired by Dungeons & Dragons and Fender guitars, artisan John Greco is tapping into cultural trends.
Roterfaden's "Pocket Companion' "
The Taschenbegleiter hand-made planner system from German artisan cooperative Roterfaden features a modular organizational system that grows with the user's ambitions.
S.T. Dupont Takes the Iron Throne
The French atelier continues its forays into popular culture with a new, officially licensed Game of Thrones collection.
More Mail, More Dip-Less
The six-part series on dip-less (or one-dip) fountain pens garnered some major attention through its run from October 2023 through August 2024 (Vol. 36 No. 6 Vol. 37 No. 5).
David Oscarson: A Reflection
The artisan pen maker celebrates 25 years of luxury writing instruments with a new collection that harkens to his Art Nouveau roots.
The Parkette Hopalong Cassidy Ballpoint Pen
The Jotter was advertised as Parker's first ballpoint pen, but a novelty item that played on the Hopalong Cassidy culture craze predated it.