-
The sound is a really big part, I think,
of the experience of using a pencil,
-
and it has this really
audible scratchiness.
-
(Scratching)
-
[Small thing. Big idea.]
-
[Caroline Weaver on
the Pencil]
-
The pencil is a very simple object.
-
It's made of wood
with some layers of paint
-
an eraser and a core,
-
which is made out of graphite,
clay and water.
-
Yeah, it took hundreds
of people over centuries
-
to come to this design.
-
And it's that long history
of collaboration
-
that, to me, makes it
a very perfect object.
-
The story of the pencil
starts with graphite.
-
People started finding
really useful applications
-
for this new substance.
-
They cut it into small sticks
-
and wrapped it in string
or sheepskin or paper
-
and sold it on the streets of London
-
to be used for writing or for drawing
-
or, a lot of times,
by farmers and shepherds,
-
who used it to mark their animals.
-
Over in France,
-
Nicolas-Jacques Conté figured out a method
of grinding the graphite,
-
mixing it with powdered clay
and water to make a paste.
-
From there, this paste was filled
into a mold and fired in a kiln,
-
and the result was
a really strong graphite core
-
that wasn't breakable,
that was smooth, usable --
-
it was so much better than anything else
that existed at the time,
-
and to this day, that's the method
that's still used in making pencils.
-
Meanwhile, over in America,
in Concord, Massachusetts,
-
it was Henry David Thoreau
who came up with the grading scale
-
for different hardnesses of pencil.
-
It was graded one through four,
-
number two being the ideal
hardness for general use.
-
The softer the pencil,
the more graphite it had in it,
-
and the darker and smoother
the line will be.
-
The firmer the pencil,
the more clay it had in it
-
and the lighter and finer it will be.
-
Originally, when pencils were handmade,
they were made round.
-
There was no easy way to make them,
-
and it was the Americans
who really mechanized the craft.
-
A lot of people credit Joseph Dixon
-
for being one of the first people
to start developing actual machines
-
to do things like cut wood slats,
cut grooves into the wood,
-
apply glue to them ...
-
And they figured out
it was easier and less wasteful
-
to do a hexagonal pencil,
-
and so that became the standard.
-
Since the early days of pencils,
-
people have loved that they can be erased.
-
Originally, it was bread crumbs
-
that were used
to scratch away pencil marks
-
and later, rubber and pumice.
-
The attached eraser happened in 1858,
-
when American stationer
Hymen Lipman patented the first pencil
-
with an attached eraser,
-
which really changed the pencil game.
-
The world's first yellow pencil
was the KOH-I-NOOR 1500.
-
KOH-I-NOOR did this crazy thing
-
where they painted this pencil
with 14 coats of yellow paint
-
and dipped the end in 14-carat gold.
-
There is a pencil for everyone,
-
and every pencil has a story.
-
The Blackwing 602 is famous
for being used by a lot of writers,
-
especially John Steinbeck
and Vladimir Nabokov.
-
And then, you have
the Dixon pencil company.
-
They're responsible
for the Dixon Ticonderoga.
-
It's an icon,
-
it's what people think of
when they think of a pencil
-
and what they think of
when they think of school.
-
And the pencil's really
a thing that, I think,
-
the average user
has never thought twice about,
-
how it's made or why it's made
the way it is,
-
because it's just always been that way.
-
In my opinion, there's nothing
that can be done
-
to make the pencil better than it is.
-
It's perfect.