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Private Reserve Black Cherry


amin

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Hi Amin,

 

Thank you for the wonderful review. It certainly looks like an ink I have to add to the collection :D. Like Roger said, aptly named, but to me it is more like Black Cherry Juice :D.

 

Warm regards, Wim

the Mad Dutchman
laugh a little, love a little, live a lot; laugh a lot, love a lot, live forever

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  • 2 weeks later...
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I love PR Black Cherry, but I've had two bottles go from that lovely burgundy to dark brown. No SITB, or anything of that sort: the ink distinctly changed color. The current bottle has what appear to be crystallized ink on the sides.

 

(I've had two bottles of PR Burgundy Mist do the same thing. This week, I am using Sheaffer Burgundy, which is well behaved, and glowering at the PR bottles.)

Good to know, that I'm not the only one with Burgundy Mist. A year ago, I purchased several inks from The Writing Desk in the UK, among them PR Burgundy Mist and J. Herbin 'Pousserie de Lune'. I remember comparing the two, where BM was a lightly darker, more saturated Burgundy shade with little brown. A year later, the BM is now a brown ink, with no red traces, rather sepia, while the PdL is still a nice Burgundy.

Edited by saintsimon
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Burgundy is probably my favorite color. I'm wearing a burgundy sweatshirt, my raincoat is burgundy and since I live in the Pacific Northwest, you all know that I wear my raincoat a good part of the year :)

 

My favorite ink still is Sheaffer burgundy but I also have Noodlers Burgundy, PR Burgundy Mist, MB Bordeaux, PR Black Cherry and Noodlers Nightshade.

 

Of all the burgundy inks still made that I have tried, I like the Noodlers Burgundy best. My PR Black CHerry is 2 years old now. It hasn't changed color but every time I write with it, I feel like I've filled a pen with Dr. Pepper. :lol:

 

It is an interest shade but it is not burgundy.

Mary Plante

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I am mostly a black and white sort of person. If I was an artist, I'd prefer to do ink drawings to colorful paintings. In photography, I favor B&W and sepia to color, unless the color has a specific purpose in my photo.

 

My ink shelf has a number of bottles, colors I've picked up over the years. I buy them but rarely use them.

 

However, Black Cherry has really caught my attention, as well as PR Midnight Blues. I'm doing a journal in just these two colors, something unusual for me.

 

I am hoping that Velma's curse of the transfiguration of Black Cherry will not be a nightmare I record in my journal somewhere down the road, in a different color than Black Cherry, that is.

 

(Might not be so bad because I just learned my favorite pen dealer is getting a small stash of Noodlers Ink colors in stock...yummy!)

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Thank you all for the nice words. Glad to be able to introduce others to this. It was disappointing to hear from KendallJ that this ink doesn't age well...

to me, i find most brownish inks don't age well. the only ones I've used that didn't take on yellowish tones or reddish tones were Levenger Cocoa and Penman Mocha. But i'm starting to tire of very saturated inks in general. never imagined i'd sayt hat. I tried Black Cherry and while the color was nice, I found it a bit dry writing. may have just been me though.

KCat
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Venerable are letters, infinitely brave, forlorn, and lost. V. Woolf, Jacob's Room

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to me, i find most brownish inks don't age well.

:eureka: If that's true, then perhaps the best way to approach this problem is to buy fresh bottles and write furiously, hitting the bottom of the bottle before it has time to turn sour.

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:eureka: If that's true, then perhaps the best way to approach this problem is to buy fresh bottles and write furiously, hitting the bottom of the bottle before it has time to turn sour.

but then all my other inks would get jealous.

 

actually, i have problems with them not aging well *in the pen* as well. which just means I have too many inked pens and not enough time to enjoy them all. :(

KCat
Save animal lives - support your local animal shelter

My personal blog https://kcdockalscribbling.com

My nature blog https://kcbeachscribbles.com
Venerable are letters, infinitely brave, forlorn, and lost. V. Woolf, Jacob's Room

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...which just means I have too many inked pens and not enough time to enjoy them all. :(

Maybe it's time to start buying those mega-million lotto tickets.

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  • 1 year later...
I had a bottle, or maybe still have it. THe color does not age well it seems after a year, it is more of a reddish brown than the dark cherry color.

 

Noodler's Tienanmen (sp?) is a similar color, with a little faster drying, and more red tones in it.

 

I have had much the same experience with 'Burgundy Mist'....

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Thank you, great review. I like this color, a bit better than PR Burgundy Mist I think. It reminds me of a darker version of Noodler's Antietam.

 

I agree with your assessment...I have the Burgundy Mist and was not particularly impressed. The Black Cherry, however, was a nice dark color. I think when I'm low on one of them, I'll mix the black Cherry and Antietam. Should be interesting.

And, yes, the Black Cherry seems better in the fine pens.

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  • 4 months later...
Oh, make sure you don't leave them in pens with clear barrels/inkview windows for too long, or they might be permanently stained :o (because of the ink's high saturation)

 

How long is "too long"?? I'm thinking of getting some of this and WAS going to use it in my new Pelikan M800, when it arrives. :unsure:

 

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  • 2 weeks later...

Today has the Black Cherry arrived... I was a little bit afraid of it's journey from the US to Czech Republic, but all went well and the bottle is on my desk... And a small amount already in my italic nibbed Pilot 78...

 

I couldn't decide between Black Cherry and Chocolate, but now I'm very content... The colour is beautiful... And the consitency,..

Many thanks to FPN and it's review index!! :)

Above all shadows rides the Sun
And Stars for ever dwell:
I will not say the Day is done,
Nor bid the Stars farewell.

 

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photography: andrejkutarna.net

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I love PR Black Cherry, but I've had two bottles go from that lovely burgundy to dark brown. No SITB, or anything of that sort: the ink distinctly changed color.

 

This happened to me with PR Fiesta Red. I dearly love Private Reserve inks and have a half dozen or more in regular use, however I don't think that I'll be buying a red ink from Private Reserve any time too soon. (On the other hand, their blues are fantastic!)

 

 

Dave

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PR has a way of coming up with the exact perfect name for their ink colors. Copper burst actually looks like copper without being metallic.

 

Great review, I'll have to pick some up.

 

Good write, Amin. Gorgeous aamof. :rolleyes:

 

To my eye, it looks as if PR named the color perfectly. Black Cherry skin, indeed! :)

 

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A friend of mine owns a wonderful pen shop...and she is also a PR dealer. When I saw this color, I knew I had to have a bottle and called her. She did not have it in stock but told me I could make my own using PR inks. Here is the recipe she gave me:

 

two parts Burgundy Mist

one part Copper Burst

one half part Plum

one part Black Magic Blue

one part Midnight Blues

 

I did pick up a bottle of the Burgundy Mist as it looks pretty close. It is a nice color but I think I still need (as in 'will die without') a bottle of Black Cherry.

 

 

If you care trying this other, much simpler recipe, you will get the exact same color;

 

1 part Aurora Black.

5 parts Waterman's Red.

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Beautiful color -- and yes, it does look like a black cherry. I may have to try some.

 

I doubt it will taste quite the same ;) :D

 

I do like that colour.

Edited by rogerb

If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you.

 

Don Marquis

US humorist (1878 - 1937)

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very original ink, I will have to think about it for use in my next pen .

Pens are like watches , once you start a collection, you can hardly go back. And pens like all fine luxury items do improve with time

 

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  • 1 month later...

I got a KCat vial via the Ink Exchange (thanks!) and could not wait to crack it open. However, I found very little color! It took a second look to realize that it did indeed have a red overtone. I was writing using a daylight “OTT Lamp”, and the calibrated scan shows the same thing.

 

I'm trying a few more changes in my ink scans this time: A full 200 dpi for the sample text, so the strokes show color properly. The doodle area is presented larger, so you can see variation in stroke and get about the same screen width. The x-closeup is the same, showing 3200 dpi (the real optical limit of my scanner) and just one letter, so you can see feathering.

 

post-16460-1211526601_thumb.jpg

 

post-16460-1211526543_thumb.jpg

 

post-16460-1211526563_thumb.jpg

 

I thought I'd also present this, showing the Hue characterization and the web color number etc. Personally I'm going to use the Hue angle (339° averaging a spot a little smaller than the pen stroke width of 0.017 inch) to file my samples in the ink book in order. Some times it's hard to decide exactly where to put it by eye.

 

post-16460-1211526571_thumb.png

 

On some screens it doesn't look like it has any color at all; on another it even looks bluish! Hopefully the vertical pink bar in the middle of the above illustration (vary the brightness) will show you what the color is supposed to be.

 

So, is something wrong with my sample? Or is my pen just too wet?

 

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  • 1 month later...

I'm not sure what went wrong with your sample but the Black Cherry that I recieved from Swisher looks nothing like what JDlugosz reviewed. To me his looks more black and grey. Perhaps it was a 'bad?' or contanimated sample?

 

I filled my parker 51 with the PR Black Cherry and it look like just that, the skin of a black cherry full of deep red and some brown. If you like the first review of this color you'll love the ink!

StJimmy.

 

"It has been my expirence that folks with no vices have very few virtues"-Abraham

Lincoln

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