Subscribe RH Love

Put a pencil to it

by | Apr 3, 2025 | Opinion

Columnist John Moore loves pencils. Even pencils that cost $30. Courtesy John Moore

They call it, “click bait.”

It’s when you come across something online that sounds amazing, so you click on it to learn more.

Click bait is something that turns out to be nothing as good as it sounded. Bait and switch. You think you’re get something that you’re not.

But in this case, what I thought was click bait turned out to be a good catch. Actually, a great catch.

Pencils.

I love pencils. Love is a light word. If I wrote out the word “love” in regard to my affinity for pencils, I’d write it by pressing hard on the paper, write it again, and then underline it.

In pencil, of course.

There are three things I always have in my work areas: A typewriter, yellow legal pads, and pencils. Really good pencils.

Composing on a typewriter isn’t something I regularly do, but having one around is important. A manual typewriter doesn’t need electricity. If the grid fails, a manual typewriter does not.

Same is true for paper and pencils.

It used to be that just about any pencil you bought was good. Not true anymore.

A lot of the pencils you find now are cheaply made. The wood isn’t good. Often, it isn’t even wood. It’s some composite substance. And the lead isn’t good graphite.

Good pencils are made of cedar wood. Specifically, a type of California cedar.

Back to the click bait.

In a feed on social media, an article came up from the Wall Street Journal discussing a thirty-dollar pencil.

That’s right. One pencil for $30. It’s called a Blackwing.

My curiosity was piqued.

When I was growing up in Ashdown, Arkansas, all kids used pencils. Big, fat pencils. They were called Husky.

Why they put big pencils in little hands, I never understood. But they worked and were the instrument that I first used to write my name, write the alphabet, and tell my momma I loved her.

I loved going to the pencil sharpener and smelling the cedar as I ground my pencil to a point. And the feel of the lead was like writing with butter.

That’s how you know if the lead is good. It feels like butter. But it’s not butter. Nor is it lead.

Pencils have never had lead in them. It’s graphite. I guess saying, “Look at this. Sonja Yates broke off pencil graphite in my arm,” doesn’t sound as good as, “Hey, look. Sonya Yates broke off pencil lead in my arm.”

Knowing a good pencil came early for me. So when I saw an article in a respectable newspaper that touted a revived brand of pencil, I had to click on it. And I was glad that I did.

The Blackwing Palomino pencil had been a favorite of writer John Steinbeck, composer John Williams, Looney Toons animator Chuck Jones, and Walt Disney.

One of Disney’s animators even requested to be buried with a Blackwing. And he was.

In 1998, sales for the Blackwing had diminished, one of the machines that made them couldn’t be fixed, and the company that made them just stopped. This caused demand for the remaining Blackwings to skyrocket.

In 2010, a company called Heritage brought them back by buying the brand and making them again. Quality cedar and Japanese waxed interiors are used. They’re fantastic.

Yes, I ordered one. Actually, I ordered a box of them. It wasn’t $30 per pencil, but they weren’t cheap. I got a small box for $35.

And they write like butter.

They’re strategically located around the house and at the office. There’s one by my chair in the living room for crossword puzzles. One by the bed near a writing pad for ideas. And of course one near the typewriter so that I can make notes before and after writing a newspaper column.

I love Blackwing Pencils a lot, but I don’t plan to be buried with them. But if my wife sees what I paid for them, I might be.

By John Moore, Owner One Moore Production

For more stories about the Wylie community see the next print, or digital edition of The Wylie News. Subscribe today and support local journalism.

Subscribe RH Love

0 Comments

Subscribe RH Love

Related News

Time for a Change

Time for a Change

Last weekend, I did something I don’t think I’ve ever done before—I forgot to discuss the time change with my husband, the chief clock changer in our house. So when I woke up at 7:30 a.m. Sunday, I approached the day as “business as usual” and went downstairs to let...

read more
House proposes $7.5 billion in new school funding

House proposes $7.5 billion in new school funding

Critics say a House bill proposing $7.5 billion in new funding for public education doesn’t go far enough, The Dallas Morning News reported. House Bill 2 would raise the per-student allotment by $220, to $6,360 a year. It would also invest $750 million in teacher pay...

read more
Voucher bill has backing of House majority

Voucher bill has backing of House majority

A slim majority of Texas House members have indicated they will back House Bill 3, which creates education savings accounts that allow families to use taxpayer money for private school education. The Dallas Morning News reported that 75 Republican legislators have...

read more
House unveils its voucher version

House unveils its voucher version

Texas House members filed a bevy of education bills last week, including a proposed $8 billion investment in public education and a voucher bill that ties the amount of money spent for private schooling to the dollar amount provided to public schools. The Austin...

read more
Door number one

Door number one

Columnist John Moore has some milk bottles to return, but the milkman no longer stops by his home. Courtesy John Moore Social media, for all of its faults, every now and then offers something worthwhile. I’m a member of a group on Facebook called, “Dull Men.” The only...

read more
Voucher bill passes Senate, arrives in House

Voucher bill passes Senate, arrives in House

A bill to implement school vouchers in Texas sailed through the Senate largely on party lines last week and now awaits consideration in the House, the Austin American-Statesman reported. House Speaker Dustin Burrows, R-Lubbock, said he believes there are enough votes...

read more
A hare much

A hare much

Columnist John Moore recalls the friends of his youth, including Harvey The Rabbit. Photo: John Moore I never had more than one at a time, but I had stuffed animals.  Don’t all kids have a security blanket when they’re young? At first, I had a monkey who had a...

read more
President and accounted for

President and accounted for

Columnist John Moore rode the Washington, DC, subway to see the presidential inauguration. Pictured left to right are Moore, Rhonda Anderson, and Kristi Antonick. Photo: John Moore Most of us can cite a handful of times when we knew that we were witnessing history....

read more
Someone’s watching

Someone’s watching

While some in society have stopped wearing watches, columnist John Moore isn’t one of them. Courtesy John Moore I noticed his Watch immediately. I usually notice watches immediately. But his was especially noticeable. It was a Rolex. I don’t own a Rolex, but one day I...

read more
Order photos