I would not label myself OCD. I'll let everyone else do it for me.
We make pens for gifts. I like to keep a supply of various pen kits and blanks on hand. Pen supplies are stored in stacked bins. There are certain combinations that are especially common gifts from us, like pink plastic (acrylic) with the Breast Cancer pen kit, Bethelem Olive Wood with Faith/Hope/Love pen kit, etc. I also keep the usual Slimline, Manhattan/Gatsby kits, and a variety of others - you get the idea.
I also keep a "Pen Kit Inventory" spreadsheet of all the pen kits we have on hand. We can refer to it on my computer without going to the shop to see what we have, which is convenient when we find out that we need a gift. I keep a printout with the kits in the shop and mark it up. When they get out of sync too much, I'll bring it in and update the spreadsheet on the computer.
I do not keep inventories of pen blanks. Like most people here, I have many more pen blanks than kits, and I am not immortal.
Photos:
- Pen Kits and Supplies
- You can see the stacked supplies. Top to bottom:
- Plastic Pen Blanks
- Pen Kits
- Knife Kits and Kitchen Tool Kits
- Wood Pen Blanks
- Small Wood Pieces (which can be made into pen blanks, etc.)
- Pen Kits with Spreadsheet.
- The kits are grouped by type. Slimlines, Manhattan/Gatsby (Wallstreet/Sierra types), etc.
- The spreadsheet has columns for Kit Type, Finish, Quantity on Hand, Drill Size, and Comments
- Finish actually means plating type - gold, chrome, rhodium, antique brass, etc.
- For kits I buy from Rockler, I also write the five digit Rockler ID number in parentheses with the Kit Type. That's useful for finding replacements, and also for differentiating between "Gold" and "Gold 24k" Slimline kits.
Waaaay Off Topic:
If you look carefully at the first photo, you might notice the small, high precision calipers that I use to check sizes as I turn the pen blank on the lathe. The calipers are between the level and the framing squares, around the clock. ;-)
... When I want a bigger lathe, I'll point to those calipers and tell my spouse, "I need a bigger lathe so I can make good use of those priceless calipers." The problem is that she knows me all too well. :-o
