For your consideration, we are offering for sale this beautiful Visconti 25th Anniversary Divine Proportions (Divina Proporzione) Limited Edition #135 of 618 Fountain Pen in a rich Burlwood celluloid with 18K gold trim (stated in the booklet). This Visconti comes with the original outer yellow box and beautiful inner Burlwood box, literature, and compass. This Visconti shows no signs of being inked and I would consider it in Mint Condition.
NOTE: This Visconti is the 18K gold trim model. Visconti made another in Sterling Silver trim in this design and name. The 18K gold model is much more scarce and the pricing reflects that.
This fountain pen is in mint condition with a clean cap, barrel, and brightly polished 18K yellow gold trim. The clip displays Visconti on both sides and on top of the cap. The limited edition number is engraved on the end of the "push & pull Touchdown filler" with 135/618.
The cap and barrel are in perfect condition with no cracks, nicks, scratches, or repairs. The cap secures to the barrel every time. The trim is perfect with no scratches and is 18K yellow gold. This fountain pen measures 5 7/8" capped and 6 7/8" posted.
This Visconti uses the patented "push & pull Touchdown filling system. I tested it with water and fills as it was designed. The Touchdown rod is engraved with, "Divina Proporzione and 0 1,1,2,3,5,8,12,21,34,55,89,144,233" and repeats around the rod.
The nib is marked Visconti with an 18K/750 Medium Nib. The nib has a medium point measuring .78mm when using digital calipers. I have not inked the pen to keep it in unused condition.
The Visconti Divine Proportions Burlwood Celluloid is on another level when it comes to pen craftsmanship. The twisted cap and barrel design with polished 18K trim makes a grand statement. This fountain pen will be a "high-cachet" standout in one's Visconti writing arsenal collection. I would grade this Fountain Pen in Mint condition and will be a heirloom writing instrument to pass down for generations to come!
Below is the literature that is printed in the Visconti documentation...
"Visconti Divine Proportions (Divina Proporzione) Limited Edition Fountain Pen is based on the golden ratio, which according to the classical Greek sculptor Phidias contains the key of knowledge. The number is 1,618 and it corresponds to what is considered a “particularly aesthetic ratio.” This ratio occurs repeatedly in nature and in fact it defines the “ideal relation,” an arithmetic measure which is enjoyable for the eye, called also “golden mean proportion” or “golden section.” Below are pictures of the pen which also has twice as much silver as the original divine proportions.
Without getting into great depth we can say that this number, also called phi, is as well used to trace different circles divided through ten – called decagons – or through five – i.e. pentagons, called pentagrams or pentacles too. The empiric discovering of the golden ration “comes from the most remote ancient times, from the prehistoric era”. We presume that our ancestors learned very soon how to trace and divide circles; they of course privileged the division of circles through five, because of the five fingers of the human hand. These are in fact “obvious” numbers indeed they lead to the natural calculation of some special proportions. However, only the Greeks, first of all Euclid, originally theorized these calculations. Before him Pythagoras – or at least his disciples – tried to disclose their mystery. Inside their sect, that was protected by the most absolute secret, the golden number was associated to the sacred, particularly to the five-pointed star – a symbol of life, beauty and love.
The pentacle is commonly thought to be the symbol through which the Pythagoreans recognized each other, but it came into our tradition throughout the centuries as a talisman of good health: we find it on some ancient coins and on several gothic cathedrals and churches. Also Plato recognized that the golden number had a privileged role in the explanation of the universe. During the XII century, Fibonacci, also Called Leonardo da Pisa, mathematician, merchant and great traveller got in touch with this scientific discipline in the Middle East, developing the famous “Fibonacci sequences”. For the architects and painters of the Middle Ages the pentagon became the symbol of the “Quintessence”, literally said “the fifth element”, i.e. absolute perfection, ideal beauty. The pentacles and circles traced with the compass were kept absolutely secret among the corporations.
In 1509 Leonardo Da Vinci illustrates De divina proportione, the work of a Franciscan mathematician, Luca Pacioli. This book with pictures by Da Vinci had a great success, as it was the written version of an ancient oral tradition. It was revealing a mystery. Today we know that the divine proportion is present in architecture (Le Corbusier frequently used it), in painting, in music, in the structure of some poems, but also in nature, in many plants and animals (many flowers have five petals, some leaves are placed on stems according to the phi ratio, which is present also in the starfish and the sea urchin). The divine proportion seems also to rule the human body: the navel, for example, divides the body according to the golden number."