wo finishes has been identified, the early ones came in brushed titanium, the other with a smooth finish, one being a little darker than the other. The pens sported very attractive double jewels in the colour of transparent rubys, a thin gold body ring, a small breather hole on the nib-part, and a gold arrow clip. They were offered as a fountain pen, cap actuated ball pen, and later as a soft tipped pen. The latter was phased out during the first quarter of 1972. Parker however emptied their leftover stock of titanium parts by adding them to ballpoints, pencils and rollerballs that has popped upp in the Parker "75" line of the period.
Soo... why is the T1 so collectible? |
Well of course the rarity of the pen has something to do with it, but the truth is that it is a very attractive pen, well designed, well balanced and, of course, the very fact that it's made from titanium. And we all know that pen collectors do not always judge their pens only by the functionality.
The T1 simply has a good feel to it.
arker wasn't blind to this fact. Seven years later, in 1978, the company announced a very close cousin to the T1, nicknamed the Parker Falcon, though it carried the model number "50". The first Falcon was a slim, all steel pen with an integrated nib, very much the same as the T1, but sans the small nib-screw.
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