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Victoria Barbour

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Historical Wednesday: December 10, 2014

December 10, 2014

Another Wednesday, another fabulous post about the regency era. Thanks so much to my fellow Romance Writers Weekly pal Collette Cameron (author of fantastic regency romances!) for coming along today to share her knowledge with us. I'm so pleased with this post for many reasons, high amongst them Collette's use of images. On Facebook Collette spends a lot of time sharing the most beautiful images with her friends and it always brightens my day. 

The Quill by Collette Cameron

Today I'm talking about Regency writing. No, not writing Regency romance, but actually writing with a quill. You know, a feather.

As an author, it's nearly impossible for me to imagine writing with a quill pen. I can barely write legibly with a fine point gel pen. 

During the Regency Era, though metal nibs had been invented, they were rarely used. Quill pens were preferred and much more economical. 

I had no idea that different sized quills were used for varies sized text. It makes sense. It's not like they had a computer they could change the font size with a simple click of a mouse.  

Goose feathers were a popular choice for quills. (I've had geese and turkeys and often wondered if their quills would have been used for writing. Both were.) The most desirable quills came from swans or peacocks. The tip of the quill (the nib) is trimmed with a knife before writing with the feather. 

Why you ask? Well, how else were they to vary the thickness of the writing? I suppose this was done when one didn't have a smaller feather sitting about. 

Gerrit_Dou_-_Scholar_sharpening_a_quill_pen.jpg

Feathers from crows, hawks, owls, pheasants, and eagles were also used. And lest you worry about the foul from whence said feathers were obtained, molted feathers were used. No chasing unsuspecting birds about the barnyard yanking feathers from them. Feathers were sorted into three grades, primes, seconds, and pinions, according to size of the quill. 

The feathers had to be hardened too. This was done by dipping the tip of the feather into hot sand until the outer membrane pulled away. The softened quill was then flattened and the end rounded. Another method to harden the quill was to boil the ends for a minute, and then lay them out to dry. This process was repeated on the finer quality pen, those longest and largest, several times. Hardened quills were more flexible and less brittle.   

Another interesting tidbit I discovered while researching Regency writing implements was that the word pen actually comes from the Latin word penna. Want to guess what it means? You're right: feather. I read contradicting accounts on whether left-handed people preferred feathers from the right wings and right-handed people preferred feathers from the left wing. Some sources said this was true, while others maintained it wasn't. 

I also learned that the barb, the actually feathery part of the pen, was trimmed as the nib was shortened from use. Some people cut away the barb completely before they began to use the pen. Those pictures we see of the huge plumes on the ends of quill pens? 

Nope. Didn't happen. 

To write, the tip was dipped into an ink pot. The quill held a small amount of ink, so redipping every little bit was necessary. (I can just imagine the unholy mess I'd make.) A blotter was used to pick up excess ink. Then, the document was sprinkled with sand to speed up the drying process.  If one needed to transport their quills, a metal quill case was often used. 

I'm trying to picture Jane Austen writing away with her quill.  Have you ever written with a quill pen? What was it like? 


Award winning, Amazon best-selling, and multi-published historical author Collette Cameron was born and raised in a small town along the northern Oregon coast. To this day, the beach continues to remain one of her favorite retreats. If you've ever lived near the ocean, you understand the irresistible, captivating draw of the sea! An enthusiast of times gone by, Collette currently writes Regency and Scottish historical romances.

Learn more about her on her website. 

Resources: 

http://janeaustensworld.wordpress.com/tag/letter-writing-in-the-regency-era/

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quill

http://regencyredingote.wordpress.com/2009/09/11/the-quill-the-regency-pen/

http://medievalwriting.50megs.com/tools/quill.htm

 

All pictures courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

 

In Historical Wednesday Tags Quill, Feather, Regency Romance, Regency era, writing, Collette Cameron
1 Comment

Romance Weekly: June 24, 2014

June 24, 2014

Thanks to Collette Cameron for this weeks questions, and thanks to Jo Richardson for linking to me this week. At the time of writing this post, her post wasn't live yet so I can't give you any insight on her answers (in case you didn't land here from her blog!) but I'm sure they are awesome? Why so sure? Because while here on the blog you get to know us authors, we are also getting to know each other pretty well, and I'm thrilled to say that the Romance Weekly group of writers are turning into some pretty great pals. So yay for that. And now, on to this weeks questions: 

1. How do you respond to someone calling your writing smut or demeaning your work in some other way?

Luckily, no one has dared call my work smut to my face. If they think it, then in all likelihood they haven't even read my books. There's a difference in demeaning the genre, which happens (see this post) and demeaning my work in particular. The most I've had happen is well-meaning people ask me when I'm going to write "a real book." That hurts a bit. My books are real books. I know they mean when are you going to write the historical fiction that you've been thinking about for years. But what they don't realize is that even those books are romances. I just smile, try and educate them on the romance genre, and move on. 

2. When critiquing or beta reading, do you ever find the voice of the other author creeping into your writing?

Not really. I wish I had a longer answer here, but I don't. 

3. What’s one quirky thing you do or must have around you while writing?

I make faces and touch myself. NOT that way! Geesh. Dirty minds! ;) But I find I'm mimicking the actions of my characters to see how it feels, how to describe it, etc. I also wiggle in my chair a lot and wiggle my fingers above the keyboard as I think. I'm a bit of public show when I'm writing in a coffee shop, I bet! 

And now, let's head over to Veronica Forand to see how she's answered these questions. She's new to the group so she'll likely have a fresh new take on these questions. AND a big congrats to Veronica, who just signed a three novel contract with Entangled Publishing! Well done you! I'll be pimping her books when they come out, you can be sure of that! 

Speaking of pimping, just a tiny reminder about the Passionate Kisses Boxed Set, just .99 cents right now for 10 novels. 

And Collette Cameron's The Vicount's Vow is also on sale for .99 cents. You should get both of them. :) 

In Romance Weekly Tags Romance Weekly, Collette Cameron, Writing
10 Comments

Romance Weekly: April 29, 2014

April 29, 2014

1. What is the most unusual thing you've ever done in the name of research while writing your book?

The most unusual thing I've ever googled while writing was "Can you have sex while suffering from a concussion." Turns out the answer is yes. My google search history is full of crazy things. Because I write contemporary romance, I haven't really had to do anything too odd. It's my search history that gets most of the oddities. Other fun searches have included "Best songs to strip too" and I also google a lot of fashion things since I'm not really a stylish gal myself. 

2. Name a non-fiction book you've read for research that you wouldn't have read otherwise (not including writing craft books.)

I've read a lot of history books in general for grad and undergrad school. When I started working on my regency novel, I had a pretty good grasp on a lot of things since that was the period I studied. But I did order an awesome book called What Jane Austen Ate and Charles Dickens Knew. The title still bothers me, but I won't get into it now. It was a useful book to really get into the day-to-day life of the eighteenth century.

3. If you could travel anywhere to do research on a book, including back in time, where would you go?

Without a doubt I'd go back to 1815. I'd start in London, try and weasel my way into a ball, finagle an invite to a country house gathering and then book passage on a ship and make my way to Newfoundland. 

Click on the cover to go to Amazon. :)

Click on the cover to go to Amazon. :)

Fun questions this week thanks to Dani Jace. And I'm super excited to pass the blog hopping torch this week to Collette Cameron. You know I'm a sucker for a good regency. Here's another book now to add to my TBR pile. :)


In Romance Novels, Self-publishing, Writing Romance Tags Romance Weekly, Romance, Victoria Barbour, Collette Cameron
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