Activity: Make a Colonial Pen From a
Feather
| Select the feather from one
of the first five flight feathers of any large bird such as a Goose, Swan
or even a Peacock. Interestingly enough, feathers from the left wing fit
the right hand best, and vice versa. Soak the feather in hot water until
it is soft, harden it by pushing it into hot sand, then proceed as
follows:
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1: First shorten the plume (
amount of shortening is optional ). Then strip away |
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2: Cut away the tip of the
barrel at a steep angle. |
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3: Make a slit in the top center
of the barrel. The best way to do this is to place the point of the
knife inside the barrel, |
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4: Slice a scoop from the underside of the pen, to about half its diameter, and centered on the slit. |
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5: Shape the nib on one side of the slit. |
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6: Shape the nib on the opposite side, making sure the two halves match. |
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7: If the underside of the nib is too concave, scrape it flat with a clean scooping cut, removing as little quill as possible. |
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8: To "nib" the pen, rest the underside of the point on a smooth, hard surface. Thin the tip from the top side by 'scraping' the blade forward at a shallow angle; then make a vertical cut, either at right angles to the slit or obliquely. On a very strong feather the last cut can be repeated to remove a very fine sliver, avoiding a rough underside on the tip of the nib. |
http://www.regia.org/quills.htm