The Pen That Signed a £2 Billion Contract
When National Grid came to sign the £2 billion Eastern Green Link 4 contract, they reached for a British made Conway Stewart pen designed for the occasion. Hand made in...
Keep your favourite pens safe on the move. This slim, padded case is handmade in England from real leather using the same luxury Montana grained leather as the Conway Stewart Notebooks, Pocket Note Pads, Expandable Pen cases, and Traditional Desk Blotters.
Available in the same 3 elegant colours of Green, Black or Burgundy.
It holds up to four pens between 80 mm and 170 mm, so it even fits the extra‑long Churchill ballpoint.
The Conway Stewart logo and "Made in England" are embossed in gold foil on the inside credit card/business card holder.
Stores 4 pens securely
Real leather in Black, Green or Burgundy
Size: 160 mm × 200 mm × 31 mm
Weight: 200 grams when empty
You can add your initials in gold or silver on the front for an additional charge
Hand-made in England
Each case is cut, stitched and edge‑burnished by skilled leatherworkers. The padded lining is added for extra protection, the elasticated pen loops are stitched onto leather backing, and a colour coordinated zip is fitted. If you choose personalisation, your initials (up to 8 characters) are pressed on the front cover with gold or silver foil.
Accessories can take up to 10 days to be dispatched.
We can expedite orders if they are needed for a specific date.
When National Grid came to sign the £2 billion Eastern Green Link 4 contract, they reached for a British made Conway Stewart pen designed for the occasion. Hand made in...
In September 1943, two B‑17 Flying Fortresses collided over the Essex countryside, killing 20 young American airmen. Eighty‑one years later, local historian Sue Lister uncovered a Conway Stewart No. 236 fountain pen from the...
Queen Camilla’s swift signature at Stationers’ Hall on 15 July 2025 links today’s monarchy to a guild that has tended the written word since 1403. The Stationers’ Company, once candle‑lit scribes beside St Paul’s, later...
In 1930, Agatha Christie, Britain’s queen of crime, picked up her fountain pen to craft puzzles that hooked a nation. Her 66 novels, like The Murder of Roger Ackroyd, spun...