User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
pencils- Plural of pencil
Extensive Definition
- ''This article is about the handwriting instrument. For other uses, see Pencil (disambiguation).
A pencil is a writing or drawing instrument consisting of
a thin stick of pigment
(usually graphite, but
can also be coloured pigment or charcoal) and clay, usually encased in a thin
wood cylinder, though paper and plastic sheaths are also used.
Pencils are distinct from pens, which use a liquid marking
material.
History
The archetypal pencil may have been the ancient Roman stylus, which was a thin metal stick, often made from lead and used for scratching on papyrus, a form of early paper. The word pencil comes from the Latin word pencillus which means "little tail."Discovery of graphite deposit
Some time prior to 1665 (some sources say as early as 1600), 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 sawn into sticks. This was and remains the only large scale 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 "lead ore"). The black core of pencils is still sometimes referred to as "lead," even though it never contained the element lead.The value of graphite was soon realized 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 graphite is soft, it requires some form of case. Graphite
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. It used
a mixture of graphite, sulphur, and antimony.
Pencil "lead" is graphite (carbon) and not the chemical
element lead. Residual
graphite from a pencil stick is not poisonous, and graphite is
harmless if consumed.
Wood holders added
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 purpose of marking 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 graphite stick inserted, and the two halves then glued together—essentially the same method 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 Conté discovered a method of mixing powdered
graphite with clay and
forming the mixture into rods that were then fired in a kiln. By varying the ratio of
graphite to clay, the hardness of the graphite rod could also be
varied. This method of manufacture which had been earlier
discovered by the Austrian Joseph
Hardtmuth of Koh-I-Noor
in 1790 remains in use.
American 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.
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.
Munroe's method of making pencils was
painstakingly slow, and in the neighbouring town of Acton,
a pencil mill owner named Ebenezer Wood set out to automate the
process at
his own pencil mill located at Nashoba Brook along the old Davis
Road. He used the first circular saw in pencil production. He
constructed the first hexagon- and octagon-shaped pencil cases that
we have today. Ebenezer did not patent his invention and shared his
techniques with whoever asked. One of those was Eberhard
Faber of New York, who became the leader in pencil
production.
Joseph
Dixon, an inventor and entrepreneur involved with the Tantiusques
granite mine
in Sturbridge,
Massachusetts, developed a means to mass
produce pencils. By 1870, The
Joseph Dixon Crucible Company was the world’s largest dealer
and consumer of graphite and later became the contemporary Dixon
Ticonderoga pencil and art supplies company.
Eraser attached
Many pencils across the world and almost all in Europe are graded on the European system using a continuüm from "H" (for hardness) to "B" (for blackness), as well as "F" (for fine point). The standard writing pencil is graded HB. According to Petroski this system might have been developed in the early 1900s by Brookman, an English pencil maker. It used "B" for black and "H" for hard; a pencil's grade was described by a sequence or successive Hs or Bs such as BB and BBB for successively softer leads, and HH and HHH for successively harder ones.Today a set of pencils ranging from a very hard,
light-marking pencil to a very soft, black-marking pencil usually
ranges from hardest to softest as follows.
Koh-i-noor offers twenty grades from 10H to 8B
for its 1500 series; Derwent produces twenty grades from 9H to 9B
for its Graphic pencils and Staedtler produces nineteen from 9H to
8B for its Mars Lumograph pencils. The main market for such wide
range of grades are artists who are interested in creating a full
range of tones from light grey to black. Engineers prefer harder
pencils which allow for a greater control in the shape of the lead.
This is reflected in the way pencils are packaged and marketed. For
example, for its Graphic pencils Derwent offers three packages of
12 pencils each: Technical (with hard grades from 9H to B),
Sketching (with soft grades H to 9B), and Designer (with medium
grades 4H to 6B).
Pencils graded using this system are used to
measure the hardness and resistance of varnishes and paints. The
resistance of a coating (also known as its pencil hardness) is
determined as the grade of the hardest pencil that does not mark
the coating when pressed firmly against it at a 45 degree
angle.
Another common method uses numbers to designated
the grade of a pencil. It was originally created by Conté and
adopted in the United States by Thoreau in the 19th century. The
following table shows approximate equivalences between the
different systems:
- Also seen as 2-4/8, 2.5, 2-5/10. Although widely accepted, not all manufacturers follow it; for example, Faber-Castell uses a different equivalence table in its Grip 2001 pencils: 1=2B, 2=B, 2 1/2=HB, 3=H, 4=2H.
The various graphite pencil grades are achieved
by altering the proportion of graphite to clay: the more clay the
harder the pencil. Two pencils of the same grade but different
manufacturers will not necessarily make a mark of identical tone
nor have the same hardness.
Colour of pencils
The majority of pencils made in the United States are painted yellow. According to Henry Petroski, this tradition 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 colours or not at all, the Koh-I-Noor was yellow. As well as simply being distinctive, the colour 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 colour so that their pencils would be associated with this high-quality brand, and chose brand names with explicit Oriental references, such as Mikado (renamed Mirado) and Mongol.Not all countries use yellow pencils; however,
German
pencils, for example, are often green, based on the trademark
colours of Faber-Castell,
a major German stationery company. Pencils are commonly round,
hexagonal or sometimes
triangular in
section.
Colouring pencils (i.e., those with a coloured
lead) are generally the same colour as the lead.
Pencil types
According to the material used to make them
;Charcoal pencils:They are made of charcoal and provide fuller blacks than graphite pencils, but tend to smudge easily and are more abrasive than graphite. Sepia-toned and white pencils are also available for duotone techniques.;Grease pencils:Also known as China markers. They write on virtually any surface (including glass, plastic, metal and photographs). The most commonly found grease pencils are encased in paper (Berol and Sanford Peel-off), but they can also be encased in wood (Staedtler Omnichrom). The oldest surviving pencil is a German carpenter's pencil dating from the 17th Century and now in the Faber-Castell collection.;Erasable colour pencils:Unlike wax-based coloured pencils, these can be easily erased. Their main use is in sketching, where the objective is to create an outline using the same colour that other media (such as wax pencils, or watercolour paints) would fill or when the objective is to scan the colour sketch. Some animators prefer col-erase to graphite pencils because they don't smudge as easily, and the different colours allow for better separation of objects in the sketch. Copy-editors find them useful too, as their markings stand out more than graphite but can be erased.;Stenographer's pencil:also known as steno pencil. These pencils are expected to be very reliable, and their lead is break proof. Sometimes steno pencils are sharpened at both ends.According to their shape
- Triangular
- Hexagonal
- Round
- Bendable (flexible plastic)
Mechanical pencils
There are also pencils which use mechanical methods to push lead through a hole at the end. The erasers are also removable (and thus replaceable), and usually cover a place to store replacement leads. Mechanical pencils are popular for their longevity and the fact that they never need sharpening.Lead types are based on thickness. Common sizes
are 0.3, 0.5, 0.7, 0.9, 1.1, and 1.6 millimetres. The 2.0 mm size
is commonly used in designing, artwork, and engineering, but is not
commonly used outside these fields due to its high cost.
Other types
- The Quadrachromic Pencil is a slightly enlarged pencil with four colours equally partitioned on the tip. The use of each colour while drawing is accomplished by rotating the pencil between the fingers.
- Penny pencil
Notes
References
- Petroski, Henry (1990). The Pencil: A History of Design and Circumstance. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 0-394-57422-2; ISBN 0-679-73415-5.
- Petroski, Henry. "H. D. Thoreau, Engineer." American Heritage of Invention and Technology, Vol. 5, No. 2, pp. 8-16.
- Acton Convservation Commission, Early American Pencils. http://town.acton.ma.us/LSCOM/EAPencils.htm
External links
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