Sunday, May 27, 2007

Plastic free: Pens

I don’t remember the last time I bought a pen. I get them for free at professional events. I even inherited a life-time supply from a tech firm that belly-upped during the dot-com-crash.

Pens are prolific in EnviroWoman’s life. I have so many pens I don’t even need to buy refills. When a pen dries up…it’s retired to the pen-stash-drawer, and I move on to the next one. This drawer, I am ashamed to confess holds 89 pens.

Yes, 89. Stupid, isn’t it? My own dirty little secret. I mean really, what family needs that many pens? Not one. It’s a fine example of excess consumption. And what’s even worse, at least ½ are single-use-pens, intended to be thrown out after they dry up and added to the 10 billion non-degradable plastic pens tossed to the landfills each year worldwide.

And of all my 89 pens, only 4 make it through the golden-gates of no-new-plastic land. Yes, only 4. That's less than 5% of my stash. Of these:

  • Three are all-metal Cross pens bestowed upon EnviroWoman by appreciative CEOs and TheWorldsBestMom. They’re the pen equivalent of ‘good china’, always stowed away in their posh boxes, never seeing the light of day because they seem ‘too expensive’ for everyday use.
  • The fourth, is a completely compostable corn-based pen made of WickedWitchoftheNorthBioplastic… which Vancity gave EnviroWoman when she won the ViaLaResolution contest. This one is intended to be composted after its gone dry.

The rest of my pen horde, all made of plastic…are doomed victims of TheUrgeToPurge – either packed away or given away.

So now EnviroWoman uses her ‘good china’ pens for everyday use. And she’s noticed something. When you use an expensive pen you get a bit paranoid about abusing it. And losing it. You hang onto it as if your nimble digits have morphed into raptor-talons. You treat it differently…because who wants to lose a $70 pen? And you know…that’s probably a really good thing.

Let’s face it….cheapo pens are less precious. We don’t guard them with raptor-talons. No, if they go wayward, no big deal…just dip into the pen-stash drawer for another. Or, throw them away, like we’re supposed to.

EnviroWoman wondered, could she limit herself for the rest of the year, or better yet...for life, to these 4 pens? Well...almost. But the fact is....she needs two for work, two for home, one for the car, and one for the purse.

And so EnviroWoman found herself needing to buy pens, for the first time in a long time.

It wasn’t as easy as she thought it would be.

She found only one all-metal pen (including the cartridge)…‘The Space Pen’ favored by astronauts and meat packers (you’re MensaMaterial if you can figure out that last one…go ahead – give it a guess). It writes in zero gravity, underwater, on wet surfaces, in blazing heat and freezing cold and at any angle. Alas, the Space Pen is packaged in plastic, as is the refill.

And that’s the trouble in pen land…almost every pen has a small amount of plastic in the cartridge (even the 3 Cross pens from EnviroWoman’s pen-stash-drawer), or the pen or refill comes packaged in plastic. Other than using a pencil, there doesn’t seem to be a way around it. And you know and I both know, you can’t sign cheques, invoices and contracts with a pencil.

EnviroWoman went a-hunting…in big box stores, in stationery boutiques and art stores, and finally to a specialty pen shop. She settled on:

  • a $6 St. Tropez Petites by Marvy…a teeny little pen perfect for the car…no packaging whatsoever and just a small amount of plastic in the cartridge and the stylus
  • a zowie yellow $48 Tornado by Retro 1951 (comes in a cardboard box, with an all metal tube case…perfect for stashing the pen in my purse along with my prismacolor pencil crayons and china markers that have replaced my highlighters, yipee)

This means, that although EnviroWoman has to commit a MINOR SIN when buying a pen (‘cuz they have those niggly lit bits of plastic in the cartridge), she’s probably going to have to commit a MAJOR SIN when she has to buy a refill (because they are packaged in plastic). But, she’ll cross that bridge when she needs to.

But the whole exercise of purging the pen stash drawer and using her ‘good china’ pens has made EnviroWoman gain a whole new appreciation for pens. There was even a mind-shift from ‘throwaway’ to ‘use for a lifetime’.

So here’s how things add up:

Category: Pens

SAINT: Some, but not all of pens offered by: Cross, Sheaffer, Triad, Olympian, Sigma, Waterman, Blass, Parker

Price: Way more expensive, but hey, you're worth it. So is the planet

Quality: Ink, the same. The pen body, the same to better

SINNER: Any of the cheapos by Bic, Sheaffer, Paper mate, Sanford, Pilot (EnviroWoman used to luv, luv, luv their Precise Rollerballs), Zebras, Pentel, etc. Especially those designed for single-use (can't buy a refill)

Lessons Learned:

  • Plastic stuff equals cheap stuff which equals disposable stuff which equals no appreciation for stuff. And voila, we end up with a throw-away society. With too much consumption. And too much garbage. And a disposable mentality. And herein lies one of the big problems with our society. You know if we had to pay more for stuff, we’d be more frugal…and careful. And use less of MotherNature. (There EnviroWoman goes again folks….waxing philosophically from her soapbox)
If you know of any other ‘no-plastic’ pens, especially those that are ‘true-blues’ with ABSOLUTLEY no plastic in the cartridge, the refill or in any packaging, please let EnviroWoman and the rest of us know.

12 comments. Read or write:

Alina said...

Lolol... this reminds me of this old story/anecdote. When Americans reached space, they discovered that ball points didn't work in zero gravity. So NASA spent millions of dollars and man-hours on research, until they finally developed a pen their astronauts could use in space. In the meantime, the Russians used a pencil.

EnviroWoman said...

Alina
I know, it's craziness. EnviroWoman goes on her little hunts and sometimes forgets to see the forest among the trees.

Alina said...

It's cool, Envirowoman. Your Space Pen just reminded me of the story (you think that could be the pen from the story? hmm...) I didn't mean anything by it :D

And by the way, I don't mean to blatantly self-promote *roll eyes and blush* but I wrote a new post about proper recycling habits. I know you are well ahead of recycling in the plastic section, but there are some quirks about glass and paper you might find interesting, like the non-recyclable glass types.

EnviroWoman said...

sweet alina
I know you didn't mean anything by it woman. But it is true, sometimes I get on these little 'no-plastic' missions and go off on tangents! Too funny.

Go ahead and blatantly self-promote. Your blog post on what you've learned being a trash lady was really interesting. I may have to just credit you with a few pointers when I write the next episode of Plastics 101.

cheers woman.

Correne said...

If you could use a pencil for most writing and only need to use ink for legal purposes, why not do the old-fashioned thing and use an ink-bottle and a quill? I don't know where you could find a goose feathers, but I happen to have a real glass pen that I bought as a souvenir in Venice. You dip it into your bottle of ink, and it writes just fine.

It would sure make signing your name feel very important.

Sarah said...

An old-fashioned fountain pen would do the trick too, and is more convenient than a quill pen- they probably still sell all-metal ones at art stores.

Anonymous said...

I realise that this is a little late, but have you tried converters? (think refilable ink cartridges) like these: http://www.thewritingdesk.co.uk/spares.php

I realise that many are made of/contain plastic parts, but is buying a small amount of plastic that is reuseable a sin if you never need to buy a plastic cartridge again (unless it breaks, of course)?

I use these in my parker pens - I got one with my first parker pen for my fifth birthday (my mother believed penmanship was an important part of learning to read and write) and have never purchased a 'standard' ink cartridge in my life (but I did get a couple of funny looks from teachers when I pulled a glass bottle of ink out of my bag, oh well). Currently I use expensive coloured inks at work which come in glass bottles with glass stoppers in cardboard boxes (no plastic as far as I can tell, but the writing's in japanese). The only real problem is the frequent need to refill the converter, if you only use on colour of ink, as the ink chamber is about half the size of a standard cartridge.

I like the idea of going plastic free, but I could see myself making many more compromises than you do, (if only because my job relies heavily on up-to-date technology, and it's almost impossible to buy a computer without plastic) and while I gave up buying throwaway plastic (plastic wrapping, containers, boxes and bags: basically anything that I don't expect will last less that a year) I will still buy things made out of - or containing plastic if it is built to last.
zj

Asrai said...

http://www.grassrootsstore.com/ has pens that are made of corn and biodegrade, including ink. Or refillable wood ones, but I think the refill is plastic. and it's canadian. :)

Anonymous said...

meatpackers need these pens because the work space is refrigerated. They even have blast freezers that get under 0 degrees F. Regular pens freeze up.

Mela said...

There's always going back to the old-time pens: glass, feather, wood, or metal and a bottle of ink. Not so practical for the purse, but a special treat on the desk! (if you like such things)

Wedding Favor Pens said...

yeah cheapo pens are the ones i toss in the trash when its pointlessly on my desk and im not using it. but the wedding favor pens are usually real nice. most of my pens are from business trips and conventions, and the really good ones are gifts.

+ lol @ alina's comment ".. this reminds me of this old story/anecdote. When Americans reached space, they discovered that ball points didn't work in zero gravity. So NASA spent millions of dollars and man-hours on research, until they finally developed a pen their astronauts could use in space. In the meantime, the Russians used a pencil."


So true.

Cheers,
Adina

Anonymous said...

sorry if this was mentioned, but... fountain pens? the all-metal, no-cartridge, bottle-filled ones are pricier, and you deal with liquid ink, but... meets your desire :)