Keetron posted:Do not forget to argue about it with strangers on the internet. Just look up how many blue-blacks there are and everyone has a different favorite. Would be much simpler if everyone would agree that Sailor blueblack is the best blueblack. But Pilot blue-black is the best blue-black. Do you want to fight me?
|
|
# ? Nov 23, 2015 19:42 |
|
|
# ? Apr 29, 2024 07:18 |
|
I like the suggestion about getting sample sizes. Also just read that you can convert the Preppys into eyedrop pens and do without the cartridges?! That sounds scary but adventurous. Does everyone typically buy inks from online? (I noticed that Goulet Pen is referenced a lot.) Or are there brick-and-mortar shops with comparable prices in places like NYC that sell 'em?
|
# ? Nov 23, 2015 19:46 |
|
My Man Shran posted:But Pilot blue-black is the best blue-black. Levenger Empyrean
|
# ? Nov 23, 2015 20:02 |
|
unicorn dreams posted:I like the suggestion about getting sample sizes. Also just read that you can convert the Preppys into eyedrop pens and do without the cartridges?! That sounds scary but adventurous. There are brick and mortar shops around but for fountain pen ink you mostly you need a store that specializes in them. Even stationery shops don't usually carry it. I did see a bottle of Quink in Staples once. I usually get mine from Amazon or JetPens but they don't carry everything. J. Herbin sells little 10ml bottles that are good for ten or so fills, I've bought several of those and been happy with them.
|
# ? Nov 23, 2015 20:16 |
grack posted:Levenger Empyrean In all seriousness, what's your experience with the Levenger inks been like? I've only recently stopped being wary of the Big L.
|
|
# ? Nov 23, 2015 21:39 |
|
My Man Shran posted:In all seriousness, what's your experience with the Levenger inks been like? Highly saturated, very wet. Lots of feathering, lots of bleedthrough but if you're writing on good paper the colours are fantastic.
|
# ? Nov 23, 2015 22:00 |
|
unicorn dreams posted:I like the suggestion about getting sample sizes. Also just read that you can convert the Preppys into eyedrop pens and do without the cartridges?! That sounds scary but adventurous. The only time I bought ink in a store in NYC was a few years ago (and that one's dead, now), but I think their prices were about the same as online (plus the various levels of tax you'd pay in a store in NYC vs. online from VA or wherever. If you really want to check, the one B&M fountain pen shop that comes to mind is Fountain Pen Hospital, although I've seen people mention that you can find [Japanese] pens and inks at Kinokunya (it's a bookstore with a stationer's attached see here.) Buying ink from Goulet is a nice thing, because they overpackage things — so you won't say, find a half-cracked cap like the one time I ordered ink from Amazon. If you want really basic ink, sometimes a Staples or Office Max might have some ink, but that's more like "Maybe some waterman cartridges, a bottle of quink in blue or black." Another option might be art supply stores, but that's also something of a crapshoot. Keetron posted:Do not forget to argue about it with strangers on the internet. Just look up how many blue-blacks there are and everyone has a different favorite. Would be much simpler if everyone would agree that Sailor blueblack is the best blueblack. Speaking of Quink, the best blue-black is absolutely Parker's Blue-Black, because it is backwards and dries blue. vvv Having recently bought some Noodler's Aircorps Blue-Black, I can no longer even call the color it dries "really really light teal." Then again, different sorts of paper absolutely change the hue — lovely copy paper is noticeably bluer (or at least more saturated and overall darker) than an almost-decent staples notebook. Zenostein fucked around with this message at 23:32 on Nov 23, 2015 |
# ? Nov 23, 2015 22:59 |
|
Parker Blue-Black dries green.
|
# ? Nov 23, 2015 23:16 |
|
I got my Varsitys today and have been copying passages out of some books I have on my computer to get back into the groove of writing by hand. Going to be trying to do that a bit every day or so until I'm satisfied with my script. Then all my friends and relatives will be receiving letters.
|
# ? Nov 24, 2015 04:42 |
|
guppy posted:There are brick and mortar shops around but for fountain pen ink you mostly you need a store that specializes in them. Even stationery shops don't usually carry it. I did see a bottle of Quink in Staples once. I usually get mine from Amazon or JetPens but they don't carry everything. Yeah. Depending on your continent, it's either blue and black Quink or blue and black Pelikan 4001 + Lamy cartridges for most stores. Speaking of inks, Pelikan blue and black are available in 1 liter jugs for the absolute lowest price per ml known to man for anyone in Europe (US prices are crazy high for some reason). My Man Shran posted:If you don't have at least one bottle of every shade or 10 bottles of a single color you are fond of then, well, you are doing this hobby wrong. , I'm currently approaching this state of ink nirvana for general multicolour use (who needs marker pens if you have a BB nib?) and blues with a hint of turquoise in particular (Iroshizuku Kon Peki blue best blue, Diamine Asa Blue cheapest adequate blue ). Also, Keetron posted:Do not forget to argue about it with strangers on the internet. Just look up how many blue-blacks there are and everyone has a different favorite. Would be much simpler if everyone would agree that Sailor blueblack is the best blueblack.
|
# ? Nov 24, 2015 11:03 |
|
Keetron posted:Do not forget to argue about it with strangers on the internet. Just look up how many blue-blacks there are and everyone has a different favorite. Would be much simpler if everyone would agree that Sailor blueblack is the best blueblack. While I agree that it looks amazing, Sailor blue-black is a pigmentedl ink and has sediment in it that you have to be wary of when using in a fountain pen. Like if you forget to use the pen for a while or neglect to clean it then it can get clogged. Fake edit: I found out they make a blue-black that is water based now so...gently caress...might need to get me some of that.
|
# ? Nov 24, 2015 21:04 |
Brightman posted:While I agree that it looks amazing, Sailor blue-black is a pigmentedl ink and has sediment in it that you have to be wary of when using in a fountain pen. Like if you forget to use the pen for a while or neglect to clean it then it can get clogged. Get two bottles of Tokiwa Matsu and one of Doyou, while you're at it.
|
|
# ? Nov 24, 2015 22:10 |
|
The Staples I work at carries Quink in bottles, but nobody ever buys it. I just might.
|
# ? Nov 24, 2015 22:52 |
|
Brightman posted:While I agree that it looks amazing, Sailor blue-black is a pigmentedl ink and has sediment in it that you have to be wary of when using in a fountain pen. Like if you forget to use the pen for a while or neglect to clean it then it can get clogged. This would actually explain the troubles I kept having with one of my Watermans, it still wrote lovely with cartridges. The dried out ones, yes, why you ask? Time to take those pens apart and try some Diamine magic on em.
|
# ? Nov 24, 2015 23:08 |
|
Does anyone know any good fountain pen shops in Tokyo that sell the complete range of Pilot Iroshizuku inks in those smaller bottles that are halfway between samplers and full-size bottles? One of my friends is going in December and I want to take advantage of that to get the full range of Iroshizuku inks for way less than they cost here and in a size that isn't sold here.
|
# ? Nov 25, 2015 00:34 |
|
You'd probably have better luck asking at a fountain pen specific forum like fountain pen network.
|
# ? Nov 25, 2015 22:29 |
|
unicorn dreams posted:I like the suggestion about getting sample sizes. Also just read that you can convert the Preppys into eyedrop pens and do without the cartridges?! That sounds scary but adventurous. Preppies are great for eye-dropper conversions because they're cheap as gently caress and hold a loooooot of ink. You can practice on blending ink colors easily using them, and if it fucks up the nib - who gives a gently caress? You spent like 3 bucks on it. The only thing that can super suck is that the barrel is cheap plastic and can crack easily. But, you can buy a pack of them, some gasket o-rings for like, a buck at your local hardware store, some silicone grease, and you will be sitting pretty. Goulet is p. amazing, but I'm biased because they're technically local to me so my shipping time is super quick, and they always send you a tootsie pop. They'll also write a little thank you note on the invoice with a sample ink and they'll tell you what it is, so it gives you a good idea what some colors look like without having to buy. They also sell fountain-pen friendly notebooks and have a blog that reviews a lot of stuff.
|
# ? Nov 26, 2015 01:20 |
|
I would think an art supply store would be your best bet. There's one here in Denver that has a fairly decent assortment of Noodler's and some other brands.
|
# ? Nov 26, 2015 02:18 |
|
You can pull the nib and feed out of a Preppy to clean it pretty easily.
|
# ? Nov 26, 2015 02:32 |
|
kim jong-illin posted:Does anyone know any good fountain pen shops in Tokyo that sell the complete range of Pilot Iroshizuku inks in those smaller bottles that are halfway between samplers and full-size bottles? Any decent-sized bookstore and even some small ones will carry these. If you absolutely must have locations: - Tokyu Hands at the Takashimaya Times Square - Itoya/K.Itoya in Ginza - Maruzen in Marunouchi
|
# ? Nov 26, 2015 05:47 |
|
Kessel posted:Any decent-sized bookstore and even some small ones will carry these. Itoya is my dream store if I ever go to that area ever. I hear they have a few floors devoted to FPs/stationery. Someday... Also, check out their LE sailor inks because they are very exclusive inks.
|
# ? Nov 26, 2015 17:53 |
|
Alder posted:Itoya is my dream store if I ever go to that area ever. I hear they have a few floors devoted to FPs/stationery. Someday... It's hilarious. They have one store which is decidedly normal for a Japanese stationery store, and then K.Itoya down the road which has a ground floor with a million fountain pens and then three floors of weird poo poo like two hundred dollar hand-crafted letter openers.
|
# ? Nov 27, 2015 05:24 |
|
I've been using fountain pens for about a year now, and really wish I'd discovered them back when I had other jobs that involved taking a lot of paper notes since it would've saved me a lot of hand cramps. When I came to work in West Africa I brought a few with me, but my American coworkers have really disliked them since they just can't figure out how to use it right. I was recently doing some work in rural areas and was passing my pen to local people to sign receipts, and again most of them I'd have to explain how to hold it and they'd get annoyed that I hadn't just handed them a ballpoint. My lead engineer is an older guy who used them growing up, so he likes mine and has tried to explain to locals that it's not some new invention or weird American thing, it's the kind of pens everyone used to use when he was young. I've found just one person that really digs them: there's a teenager that works in a general store at a little dirt road town near my worksite, and I've passed him my Pilot Petit to sign my receipt-book, and he loves it and keeps bugging me to gift it to him, so I'm going to put a fresh short cartridge in it and pass it off to him, though I have no idea where in this country he can find replacement cartridges, but if nothing else it'll be a cool souvenir.
|
# ? Nov 28, 2015 19:04 |
|
S'cool of you. Have to fight anyone off with a fountain pen yet?
|
# ? Nov 29, 2015 04:30 |
|
TapTheForwardAssist posted:I've found just one person that really digs them: there's a teenager that works in a general store at a little dirt road town near my worksite, and I've passed him my Pilot Petit to sign my receipt-book, and he loves it and keeps bugging me to gift it to him, so I'm going to put a fresh short cartridge in it and pass it off to him, though I have no idea where in this country he can find replacement cartridges, but if nothing else it'll be a cool souvenir. If there's bottled ink there, he can refill the cartridge with a syringe.
|
# ? Nov 29, 2015 04:39 |
Got my Jinhao 750 in recently. This thing writes beautifully and puts down a ton of ink. I need to ink this up with something shaded as I think it'd do a nice job showing off color depth. Noodler's black get firehosed out but I'm kind of digging it.
|
|
# ? Nov 29, 2015 05:01 |
|
404notfound posted:The more I use my Metro, the more I like it. Why is my cheapest pen the favorite? My favorite pen I ever held.
|
# ? Nov 29, 2015 06:26 |
|
I swear there must be a law somewhere that says Kaweco nibs can't actually be usable out of the package.
|
# ? Dec 3, 2015 01:04 |
|
I felt kinda bad when I realized the main reason I wanted some particular Kaweco pen was more for the really cute packaging than the actual pen (although I did want the pen pretty bad).
|
# ? Dec 3, 2015 01:19 |
|
My daughter lost (well, left in a classroom and someone took it, same diff) a Kaweco Sport that I gave her and I gave her heck for it but also just got her a pair of Metropolitans for Christmas so I might be a bad or good parent depending on your view
|
# ? Dec 3, 2015 04:06 |
|
You're getting your child fountain pens, I'm pretty sure this defaults you to being a good parent. Have you considered letting her pick the finish? It might motivate her to take a little better care if she has a little responsibility in picking it out. And if she doesn't like the colours of the two you got, well, two more fountain pens for you! I see no problem with this plan.
|
# ? Dec 3, 2015 05:48 |
|
grack posted:And if she doesn't like the colours of the two you got, well, two more fountain pens for you! I see no problem with this plan. There are only upsides. To be sure, buy four in case she likes the Metro's and you are left without those two.
|
# ? Dec 3, 2015 11:35 |
|
Mnemosyne posted:If there's bottled ink there, he can refill the cartridge with a syringe. That's an interesting point, I don't know if stationery stores in Liberia carry fountain pens and/or ink. I should duck into a larger one and see what they have. Along those lines, are there any parts of Africa that are famous for using fountain pens, kind of like how India is famous for still producing and using them?
|
# ? Dec 4, 2015 19:08 |
|
Who uses a pen case, makeshift or otherwise? And what pens do you carry in it and where do normally carry the case? I've got a handful of cheap pens (Konrad, Ahan, Jinhao, Safari and 2 metros) and I've been keeping them in an old metal sunglasses case in a small messenger bag. It seems to be working fine for the most part with the exception of rubbing some of the finish off the bottom of the metros and one time it got jostled enough for the Konrad to leak through its cap. I figure that last one is more of a problem with the Konrad than the case. The case did do the job of stopping ink from getting all over everything in the bag. I'm probably going to order some ink relatively soon so I might grab a case while I'm at it. I don't recall any nerding out cases ITT.
|
# ? Dec 8, 2015 04:28 |
|
I have one of these that works well, but all of my pens have clips. I don't know how well it would do if yours don't. http://www.jetpens.com/Lihit-Lab-Teffa-Pen-Case-Book-Style-Black/pd/7665 I put it in my backpack when I need it, just making sure it's sitting so that when the bag is standing upright, like when I'm walking, all the pens will be too. The thing I bring out the most often is this, to be honest: http://www.jetpens.com/Lihit-Lab-Teffa-Bag-in-Bag-A4-Black/pd/8089 It holds my laptop, a notebook, a sketchbook, pens and pencils and some other supplies. Edit: Since you said small messenger bag, space is probably a consideration, so maybe try a roll type case: http://www.jetpens.com/Saki-P-661-Roll-Pen-Case-with-Traditional-Japanese-Fabric-Navy/pd/7475 I can't recommend any rolls in particular, but they're a popular method of stashing things. Edit edit: Jetpens has a pretty nice recommendations page, maybe you'll spot something you like: http://www.jetpens.com/blog/a-comprehensive-guide-pencil-cases-pouches-rolls/pt/450 long-ass nips Diane fucked around with this message at 04:46 on Dec 8, 2015 |
# ? Dec 8, 2015 04:35 |
|
I use those Saki pen rolls that Swagger Dagger linked. They work well, although it is possible for them to become unwrapped and open up if places in a bag or backpack (doesn't happen often, but has happened). I think the cloth ones look nicer, but the (faux) leather ones are sturdier and provide more protection.
|
# ? Dec 8, 2015 04:56 |
|
It looks like the metal protective cases are really similar to the metal sunglasses case I've got now. That makes me less interested in getting something new. I'm thinking I might just want to stick a little fabric in the case so my pens can't move around inside it as much. It looks like the roll up style is what I'm interested in. It looks like they've got plenty of inexpensive options so I can shop around for something I think is cool. My messenger bag can fit a 10" tablet, my pen case and a small notebook or three, plus some assorted small crap. It's not super tiny.
|
# ? Dec 8, 2015 05:34 |
|
At home, for inked pens, I use wraps from EXBPens and a Franklin-Christophe Penvelope Six. When I want to take a nice pen or two out and about, but not six of them, I have a Lamy one-pen holder and a Visconti two-pen case. I carry the Penvelope Six in a messenger bag when I take it out; I carry the smaller ones in my pocket. The Visconti case is solid, pretty protective and has soft lining in the pen slots. I can zip my Homo Sapiens in it with plenty of room to spare. The Penvelope is even more protective, and I may get a small two-pen version of that sometime as well. For uninked pens, I use felt pen wraps from His Nibs, but in the house we have a few of their nicer wraps as well. They're all well-made. atholbrose fucked around with this message at 07:10 on Dec 8, 2015 |
# ? Dec 8, 2015 07:07 |
|
I picked up a package of leather remnants, a cheap roll cutter and some heavy duty nylon thread and sewed an assload of cases. Cost me $10 and I think I got 6 usable sleeves out of the material.
|
# ? Dec 8, 2015 07:37 |
|
|
# ? Apr 29, 2024 07:18 |
I use one of These with a foam/felt insert I made out of craft store materials. It's tough enough to put in the main compartment of my briefcase every day and holds 3 big pens. Also, this thing is pretty nifty, but I wouldn't put pens in it that you don't mind rubbing up against other pens.
|
|
# ? Dec 8, 2015 21:40 |