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[[Image:1927-07-GoldStarry.jpg|thumb|A 1927 [[Gold Starry]] advertising]]
 
[[Image:1927-07-GoldStarry.jpg|thumb|A 1927 [[Gold Starry]] advertising]]
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Le origini della [[Gold Starry]] si fanno risalire al [[1909]] quando ''Maurice Jandelle'' iniziò la commercializzazione in Francia con il marchio ''Gold Star'' di penne della [[Conway Stewart]]. Questo marchio però era già stato depositato per cui nel [[1912]] venne trasformato in [[Gold Starry]], con una scelta che rimarcava le origini inglesi delle penne, che vennero commercializzate fino al [[1919]]. Le prime penne commercializzate dalla [[Gold Starry]] erano delle [[rientranti]] in ebanite nera o marmorizzata. I primi modelli, introdotti all'incirca nel [[1913]], erano stilografiche a [[caricamento a contagocce|contagocce]] o [[safety]], identificate da due cifre (modelli [[Goldstarry 36 e 39|36]] e [[Goldstarry 36 e 39|39]]), che indicavano il prezzo in franchi.  
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[[Gold Starry]] origins can be traced back to [[1909]] when ''Maurice Jandelle'' began marketing [[Conway Stewart]] fountain pens in France, under the ''Gold Star'' brand name. That trademark however had already been registered, so in [[1912]] it was transformed into [[Gold Starry]], with a choice to remark the English origin of the fountain pens, which were marketed until [[1919]]. The first pens sold by the [[Gold Starry]] were hard rubber black or marbled safeties. First models were introduced around the [[1913]], were [[eyedropper filler]] or [[safety]], identified by two digits (models [[Goldstarry 36 and 39|36]] e [[Goldstarry 36 e 39|39]]), indicating the price in francs.  
    
At the beginning of the '20s ''Paul Jeanvrin'' and ''André Petit'' began a fountain pens production in a pavilion on the outskirts of Paris. In [[1921]] the two joined ''Maurice Jandelle'' and the [[Gold Starry]] was established as a wholly-owned French company, starting its own fountain pens production and stopping the import of English pens. With manufacturing in France, the company adopted the slogan ''"the stylo qui marche"'', meaning both the dynamism than the reliability of their pens.   
 
At the beginning of the '20s ''Paul Jeanvrin'' and ''André Petit'' began a fountain pens production in a pavilion on the outskirts of Paris. In [[1921]] the two joined ''Maurice Jandelle'' and the [[Gold Starry]] was established as a wholly-owned French company, starting its own fountain pens production and stopping the import of English pens. With manufacturing in France, the company adopted the slogan ''"the stylo qui marche"'', meaning both the dynamism than the reliability of their pens.