Conway Stewart
@Conway__Stewart
Handmade British pens since 1905
Series 100 Commander — handmade in England, midnight‑blue acrylic with hall‑marked 23 ct gold‑plated trim.




In 1943, two U.S. B-17 bombers collided over Essex in icy fog, killing 20 airmen including navigator Guilford Black, whose Conway Stewart No. 236 fountain pen—unearthed 81 years later by local historian Sue Lister—will soon be donated to the RAF Hornchurch Heritage Centre.


On 15 July 2025 Queen Camilla signed the oath book at Stationers’ Hall with a Conway Stewart pen, joining a guild that has guarded words since 1403. From quills to digital news, the Stationers train wordsmiths and Conway Stewart still hand‑makes its pens nearby.


Brand Ambassador Aidan Bernal Reviews: Series 100 Amber - mailchi.mp/conwaystewart.…

What if your pen rivaled a Rolls-Royce Phantom? Conway Stewart’s 2015 Rolls-Royce pen, with its RR logo, inspires bespoke designs for all—engrave a date or logo, made in England since 1905. Start yours now. conwaystewart.com/pages/bespoke-…



Colleagues retiring, friends moving on, family graduating? Let them pick their own Conway Stewart pen, engraved just for them, with a digital gift card. Made in England since 1905. Send one now and make their next chapter special. conwaystewart.com/collections/gi…

Conway Stewart improved its Leather Folio Wallet after a customer suggested adding a wide leather band on the back to attach to wheeled cabin luggage. Made in England from Montana leather its slim design fits a 13-inch MacBook or documents. conwaystewart.com/products/leath…


Made in England, the Conway Stewart Luxury Notebook in Green offers Montana leather and A5 vellum paper for jotting down life’s moments. Jonathan G. shares, “It speaks volumes—a perfect match for a Conway Stewart pen.”

June 1940: France fell, Nazi planes outnumbered RAF. Fear gripped Britain. Churchill’s “We shall never surrender” rallied a nation, steeled for battle. In 2025, his unity call echoes. Conway Stewart’s pen holds his fire.




In 1835, a whistle shattered the dawn, signalling a world about to change. Horse-and-cart ruled the roads, plodding at 10 miles an hour, but a group of dreamers in Bristol had a bolder vision. They founded the Great Western Railway: conwaystewart.com/products/brune…



In 1930, as Britain craved clever escapes, Agatha Christie and her fellow writers’ pens spun whodunit tales that kept the nation guessing. The Detection Club, a society born to craft imaginative murder mysteries for a post-war world hungry for order. conwaystewart.com/products/conwa…
