Why the pencil is perfect Small Thing Big Idea a TED series

Translator: Krystian Aparta
Reviewer: Camille Martínez

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.

译者:Krystian Aparta
审稿人:Camille

Martínez 我认为,在使用铅笔的体验中,声音是非常重要的一部分,

而且它有这种非常
可听的沙沙声。

(抓挠)

【小东西。 好主意。]

[铅笔上的卡罗琳·韦弗

] 铅笔是一个非常简单的物体。

它由木头制成,
带有几层

油漆、橡皮擦和芯,芯

由石墨、
粘土和水制成。

是的,
数百人花了几个世纪

的时间才完成了这个设计。 对

我来说,正是如此悠久
的合作历史

使它成为
一个非常完美的对象。

铅笔的故事
始于石墨。

人们开始为这种新物质寻找
真正有用的应用

他们把它切成小棍子

,用绳子
、羊皮或纸包

起来,然后在伦敦街头出售,

用于书写或绘画,

或者很多时候
,农民和牧羊人

用它来标记他们的动物 .

在法国,

Nicolas-Jacques Conté 想出了一种
研磨石墨的方法,

将其与粉状粘土
和水混合制成糊状。

从那里,这种糊状物被填充
到模具中并在窑中烧制

,结果是
一个非常坚固的石墨芯

,不易碎
,光滑,可用——

它比现有的任何东西都要好得多
。 时间,

直到今天,
这仍然是制作铅笔的方法。

与此同时,在美国
马萨诸塞州康科德

,是亨利大卫
梭罗提出

了不同硬度铅笔的分级标准。

它分为 1 到 4 级,

第 2 级
是一般用途的理想硬度。

铅笔越软,里面
的石墨就越多,

线条也会越暗越平滑。

铅笔越硬,里面
的粘土就越多,

它就会越轻越细。

最初,当铅笔是手工制作时,
它们是圆形的。

制造它们没有简单的方法

,真正将工艺机械化的是美国人。

很多人认为 Joseph

Dixon 是第
一批开始开发实际机器的人之一,这些机器

可以做诸如切割木板条、
在木头上切槽、

在上面涂胶水

……他们发现
这更容易,浪费更少

做六角铅笔,

于是就成了标准。

自从铅笔问世以来,

人们就喜欢它们可以被擦除。

最初,它是

用来刮掉铅笔痕迹的面包屑

,后来是橡胶和浮石。

附加橡皮擦发生在 1858 年,

当时美国文具商
Hymen Lipman 为第一支带有附加橡皮擦的铅笔申请了专利

,真正改变了铅笔游戏。

世界上第一支黄色铅笔
是 KOH-I-NOOR 1500。KOH

-I-NOOR 做了一件疯狂的事

,他们在这支铅笔
上涂了 14 层黄色涂料

,并将末端浸入 14 克拉的黄金中。

每个人

都有一支铅笔,每支铅笔都有一个故事。

Blackwing 602
因被许多作家使用而闻名,

尤其是 John Steinbeck
和 Vladimir Nabokov。

然后,你
有 Dixon 铅笔公司。

他们
负责狄克逊提康德罗加。

它是一个图标

,是人们
在想到铅笔时会想到

的东西,
当他们想到学校时会想到的东西。

我认为,铅笔确实是一件

普通用户
从未想过的东西,

它是如何制造的,或者为什么它是这样制造
的,

因为它一直都是这样。

在我看来,没有什么

可以让铅笔变得更好了。

这是完美的。