thumb|Five-piece silver inkstand for Antonius Simons van Breda (1750-1823), made by silversmith Johannes Adrianus van der Toorn (1747-1832), collection KU Leuven An inkstand is a stand, tray, or casket used to house writing instruments. They were generally portable objects, intended to sit on the table or desk where the person was writing. They were useful household objects when quill pens and dip pens were in everyday use. At the most basic, an inkstand had a pen, a tightly-capped inkwell, and a sand shaker for rapidly drying the ink after it was written on the page.
thumb|Five-piece silver inkstand for Antonius Simons van Breda (1750-1823), made by silversmith Johannes Adrianus van der Toorn (1747-1832), collection KU Leuven An inkstand is a stand, tray, or casket used to house writing instruments. They were generally portable objects, intended to sit on the table or desk where the person was writing. They were useful household objects when quill pens and dip pens were in everyday use. At the most basic, an inkstand had a pen, a tightly-capped inkwell, and a sand shaker for rapidly drying the ink after it was written on the page.
Other items might also be included. A penwiper (a cloth for wiping blobs of ink off the end of the pen) would often be included, and from the mid-nineteenth century, an inkstand might have a box or compartment for steel nibs used in dip pens. They might have a box or drawer for sealing wax and other necessities, such as a candle and a candle holder to use while melting the wax wafers.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).