Pencil extender explained

A pencil extender (or pencil lengthener) is a small instrument (made out of metal or wood) allowing to extend small pencils, in order to facilitate their use.[1]

History

Ever more efficient means of mass production of pencils has driven the replacement cost of a pencil down. Before this, people would continue to use the stub of a pencil to delay the cost of a new one.[2] For those who "did not feel comfortable using a stub, pencil extenders were sold. These devices function something like a porte-crayon [...] the pencil stub can be inserted into the end of a shaft [...] Extenders were especially common among engineers and draftsmen, whose favorite pencils were prized dearly. The use of an extender also has the advantage that the pencil does not appreciably change its heft as it wears down." Artists currently use extenders to maximize the use of their colored pencils.

Production

Several companies still produce this kind of object, including Caran d'Ache, Faber-Castell, Koh-i-Noor Hardtmuth, General Pencil Company, Inc., and the Derwent Cumberland Pencil Company.

Notes and References

  1. Phil Metzger, Pencil magic. Landscape drawing techniques (first chapter: "Tools and materials'"), 2004 .
  2. Henry Petroski, The Pencil: A History of Design and Circumstance, New York: Random House, 2010 .