Jump to content

Rohrer And Klingner Scabiosa


carpedavid

Recommended Posts

http://4.bp.blogspot.com/--_Ltn4RytvI/TyiDKH-0nBI/AAAAAAAAAdQ/Q5-mPobIK_k/s640/rohrer+and+klingner+scabiosa.jpg

(click to embiggen)

 

We writers often struggle with the concept that our words might not survive us. Thousands of artists have produced countless poems and plays and prose over the years, of which but a few remain in the popular consciousness. What will remain of our words when we pass beyond the veil? A poem? A story? Will a collection of ink reviews define my literary existence for future generations?

 

Complicating our ennui is the medium that we choose. Writers of our era produce most of our words on a computer, which, when reduced to their base components are simply patterns encoded as zeroes and ones — ephemeral bits floating in a sea of magnetic media covered by a fog of electrons.

 

I'm not a luddite (precisely the opposite, in fact), but I think that the virtual nature of our work is why so many of us find comfort in writing with a fountain pen on good quality paper. There is a palpable sense of history in a pen and paper. Sure — paper can burn or moulder, but it is one of the few things that we as a society strive to preserve.

 

Writing with a physical instrument on a medium that's been in use for thousands of years connects us to other writers, connects us to a history of the written word that will endure collectively, even when our individual contributions are forgotten. Our words have a physical presence in our notebooks that, depending upon the quality of the ink and paper, could outlast us.

 

The choice of ink, then, defines a lot about how you, as a writer, relate to the word on the page. For those of us that embrace impermanence, there are inks that will feather and run with the addition of the smallest amount of moisture, but for those that are caught in the grip of an existential crisis, there are permanent, waterproof inks — inks like iron gall.

 

For those unfamiliar with iron gall, it was the most common form of ink used in Europe from the 12th through the 19th centuries. When used on vellum or paper, it cannot be removed by rubbing or washing – only be scraping away a layer of the writing surface.

 

Traditional iron gall ink has one very specific caveat. It is produced by combining iron salts with tannic acid extracted from various vegetable sources (traditionally from oak galls, which are hard, brown spheres that grow on oak trees and house wasp larvae – for real – nature is weird), which means that it is not pH neutral. Over time, the acidic nature of the ink will gradually eat away at vellum and paper, and could contribute to the corrosion of any steel components on a fountain pen. Perhaps that feeling of permanence is illusory after all.

 

Fortunately, modern formulations of iron gall ink are safe for fountain pens. The levels of acid are low and should not be a cause for concern for most users. The main drawback to iron gall inks these days is the limited choice of color. Every iron gall ink I've seen has been a blue black — but then I was introduced to Rohrer and Klingner Scabiosa.

 

Scabiosa is a pretty, dusky purple comparable to Diamine Damson and J. Herbin Poussiere de Lune. Named after the eponymous flower, it has a low level of saturation which results in a moderate level of shading in a fine-nib pen. In a broad calligraphy pen, the shading is accentuated, and it results in a very lovely line full of depth and character.

 

Iron gall inks are traditionally dry-writing, and therefore behave well on most paper. Scabiosa is no exception. The show-through was minimal on all of the paper I tested, and I detected bleed-through only on the cheap copier paper that would let a pencil bleed-through.

 

Dry time was very good across the board, ranging from 3 seconds on the cheap copier paper to 12 seconds on the Rhodia paper. The outlier was staples bagasse, on which it took a full 16 seconds to dry. Feathering was also consistently low relative to the character of every paper; there were no surprises.

 

http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-eTRtJ6-3TQk/TyncTB8oOjI/AAAAAAAAAdY/FKSOjp1nYBQ/s320/rohrer+and+klingner+scabiosa+water+test.jpg

(click to embiggen)

 

As an iron gall ink, Scabiosa has extraordinary water resistance. It's almost not worth showing the results, as it is incredibly difficult to tell that I did any testing at all. However, for the sake of completeness, I've included it above.

 

The drip test, in which I let several drops of water sit on the page before blotting them up, shows no effect at all. While I was able to transfer a little bit of ink that hadn't bonded to the writing paper on to the blotting paper, the line that remains is identical to the original.

 

For the smear test, in which I run a wet finger across the page, the results were almost the same. If you look very, very closely, you can see a very fine purple haze where the ink that hadn't bonded to the Rhodia travelled across it.

 

Finally, the soak test, in which I run the paper under water for thirty seconds, resulted in a very gradual lightening of the lines, as all the ink that hadn't bonded was washed away. What remains, though, is completely and easily readable.

 

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-VBaXE8QETO4/TyiDI6H3ggI/AAAAAAAAAc4/kgsRTWipsm8/s320/roher+and+klingner+scabiosa+bottle.jpg

(click to embiggen)

 

Rohrer and Klingner inks come in a 50ml glass bottle with a screw-on, metal lid. The color featured on the label in intended to mimic the color of the ink within. They're neither unattractive nor exceptionally pretty; instead they're merely functional, and remind me of art supplies. Unless you're an artist, they're not the kind of bottle you're likely to feature in a prominent place on your desk.

 

http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-6MZliJvcpVw/TyiDJGJVRMI/AAAAAAAAAdA/b9dc7_Az5p0/s320/rohrer+and+klingner+scabiosa+hand.jpg

(click to embiggen)

 

One final word about the water resistance of Scabiosa - it does a pretty good job of clinging to skin. This took a few washes to get completely off.

 

Rohrer and Klingner Scabiosa is a wonderful ink that I will not hesitate to recommend. It is the only purple iron-gall ink that I know of, it behaves admirably on all paper, and it is lovely to write with. If you like dusky purple inks like J.Herbin Poussiere de Lune or Diamine Damson, or you like your ink to have better staying power than the average ink, be sure to check out Scabiosa.

 

Review notes: The widest lines were made with two Pilot Parallel calligraphy pens: one with a steel 6.0mm nib and the other with a steel 3.8mm nib. The medium lines were made with a Lamy Joy Safari with a 1.9mm steel calligraphy nib. The narrow lines were created with a Visconti Homo Sapiens with an EF palladium nib. The paper is Rhodia 80 gsm from a Rhodia Bloc No. 18. The featured script is Fractur.

seize the dave - a little bit about a lot of stuff: ink reviews, poetry, short fiction, and more
my ink reviews
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 41
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

  • The Good Captain

    4

  • USMCMom

    3

  • Uncle Red

    2

  • JimB

    2

One of my favourites, along with their Salix. With care pens these days will be quite happy with the current iron gall inks out there. I'm tending to have a couple of pens inked with them at any one time. I'm pretty fastidious with the flushing out and so on but they are certainly fun and will cope with almost all papers I've used - even till receipts from the supermarket!

The Good Captain

"Meddler's 'Salamander' - almost as good as the real thing!"

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Very nice review Carpedavid and as always exceptional handwriting. I have this ink and I do love it, but for some reason it is no where as nice on paper with my hand as it yours. Thank you for the background history as well on IG inks.

http://www.ishafoundation.org/images/stories/inner/ie-logo.gif

 

Inner Engineering Link

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I adore iron gall inks. Scabiosa may be my favorite due to its purple-ness; it's such a nice change from the traditional blue-black iron gall. I haven't had any maintenance issues with either of the R&K iron galls (Scabiosa and Salix). They flush quickly and, as long as you don't allow the nib to dry out, start-up is reliable.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Beautiful review!!

Find my homemade ink recipes on my Flickr page here.

 

"I don't wait for inspiration; inspiration waits for me." --Akiane Kramarik

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Fortunately, modern formulations of iron gall ink are safe for fountain pens. The levels of acid are low and should not be a cause for concern for most users. The main drawback to iron gall inks these days is the limited choice of color. Every iron gall ink I've seen has been a blue black — but then I was introduced to Rohrer and Klingner Scabiosa.

 

 

 

It's probably also worth pointing out that apart from the pH of modern IG inks being higher, their formulation is generally stoichiometrically correct - i.e there are not excesses of any constituent in the formulation. This was one of the major drawbacks of historical IG inks. Historically sulphuric acid was often used, while modern IG inks tend to use hydrochloric acid, which is a dissolved gas - any excess is able to evaporate.

 

As far as other IG colours go - take a look at the experiments that pharmacist is currently doing to create IG inks with different colours. - It looks like he has some very interesting inks in the pipeline, especially the green and burnt orange ones.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Many thanks for the beautifully handwritten and accurate (IMHO) review.

 

A truly unique ink (non blue-black iron-gall). Wonderful performance in medium-to-wet writers, excellent water resistance.

 

My difficulty is finding a use for it. I tend to have only 3 pens inked at a time (a blue-black iron-gall or similar, a default blue, and a brighter accent/editing colour).

 

Scabiosa isn't blue/black enough for my office, too dark for editing/markup, and too sober (IMHO) to be personal/convivial.

 

So I'll keep trying it again...

 

Scabiosa has to be experienced to be believed.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Oh, dear lord, why did I read this review?? The last thing I need is more purple ink. This place is just evil...

 

 

Thanks for the review!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I just purchased this ink from Niklas and so far I've been patient knowing it's on its way to the States. This review is testing my state of calm. Thanks for the review. I purchased this ink to write in my kids journals and it will be my first iron gall ink.

 

Niklas still has this on sale by the way.

I'm just a customer happy to get it at a good price.

Mark

Edited by Bogusman99

When you have pen and ink, every problem needs a piece of paper.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Great review of an ink I like to use. I love your writing and all the extra info and details you've provided. Super review!

How small of all that human hearts endure,
That part which laws or kings can cause or cure.

— Samuel Johnson

 

Instagram: dcpritch

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Great review and excellent background info. Thank You!

"Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one." -- A. Einstein

Link to comment
Share on other sites

wow--thanks for a very informative review, carpedavid--very nice

 

now, if we could get the good cap'n to give us as thorough a review and backstory on the latest meddler's color "hooker's green".....

 

or is the description pretty much the same as the review, cap'n?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Your handwriting matches this ink perfectly -- both are stunning. This ink and Salix are two of my R&K faves. Especially this one, since I have and use all 7 currently available FP IGs but sometimes like this one the most. Maybe that's because it's the least blue-black IG (a colour which I adore anyway). As if that weren't enough, the stuff is easy to get, everywhere here, and that at a stupendously low price. http://i654.photobucket.com/albums/uu264/peli46/thumbsup.gif

 

Mike http://i654.photobucket.com/albums/uu264/peli46/Applause.png

Life is too short to drink bad wine (Goethe)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

wow--thanks for a very informative review, carpedavid--very nice

 

now, if we could get the good cap'n to give us as thorough a review and backstory on the latest meddler's color "hooker's green".....

 

or is the description pretty much the same as the review, cap'n?

Well I'll tell you something; I don't mind paying for ink but...

The Good Captain

"Meddler's 'Salamander' - almost as good as the real thing!"

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi,

 

Thanks for another great review! :clap1:

 

Bye,

S1

The only time you have too much fuel is when you're on fire.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

+1 It's running neck and neck with ESSRI as my favorite ink, period.

 

Mentions of a burnt orange IG ink above got my attention at once. Where can I find that?

It is easier to stay out than get out. - Mark Twain

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now







×
×
  • Create New...