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Montblanc Starwalker Black Mystery Fountain Pen


fpupulin

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Since my first encounter with a Montblanc 149 when I was still a teenager, I have been irresistibly drawn to the range of black and gold pens that Montblanc proudly call his Meisterstück line. My two Writer Editions pens are, in fact, grossly built on a Meisterstück 139 body, and they share the same nib of my modern 149s.

The only Montblanc outside the range of Meisterstück (and siblings) that I own is a Bohéme Big Size, a great pen that I amazingly and quite incredibly find in Costa Rica and that I previously review on this same forum (http:/www.fountainpennetwork.com/forum/topic/206497-montblanc-boheme-big-size-another-review/).

It has been therefore a double pleasure when two of my dearest friends, coming back from a journey to Europe, surprised me with the gift of a Montblanc Starwalker Black Mystery, still in its pristine package as prepared at the Champs-Elysées Montblanc boutique in Paris.

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Montblanc%20Starwalker%20capped%20%20watch_zpsly6bypkz.jpg

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Montblanc%20Starwalker%20uncapped%20%202%20watches%201_zpsxoukmmdy.jpg

I confess that the Starwalker range was quite a mystery (but not a black one…) for me, even though I superficially appreciated the modern shape of the pens and the fantastic idea of the star floating within the transparent acrylic dome of their cap’s top. But here I am, with my shiny new Montblanc Starwalker between the fingers, and as I found not so many discussions and reviews of this fountain pen, I thought it was worthy presenting my beautiful example to my “friends in pens”.

The Starwalker collection (including fountain pen, fine liner, ballpoint pen, and mechanical pencil) was originally introduced in 2003 and aimed to a younger target than the Meisterstück line, interested in a “chic” writing instrument made out of extraordinary materials, but pushing the boundaries of traditional design beyond the old-school look of classic fountain pens. I think that Montblanc was successful in making its Starwalker range immediately recognizable for its cutting-edge design, a synthesis of ergonomics and futuristic shapes, and to set it to the highest standards of quality in terms of materials and finishing details, which buyers are actually expecting from the brand.

Within the Starwalker line, the Black Mystery design was launched in 2010 and, according to Montblanc, the linear pattern engraved by laser on the body and the cap of the pens was inspired by the lights of Manhattan at night. The abstract graphic motif is indeed quite discreet but unquestionably modern and distinctive enough to become a brand contemporary classic. The urban, hi-tech Black Mystery pattern was eminently intended for a men public, and in the last years it has become an emblematic motif among Montblanc collections. Besides the writing instruments, the Black Mystery motif has been embossed in the leather of the 4810 Westside Black Mystery goods and, more recently, it inspired the lightweight products of the 4810 Westside Black Mystery Canvas line.

The fountain pen

At 14 cm when capped, 12.5 cm uncapped, and 15 long cm when posted, the Black Mystery is a full sized pen that you can easily compare to a Meisterstück 146 in general size. The two pens are exactly the same length when uncapped, but the 146 is about 1 cm longer when capped. I usually do not post my pens, but the Starwalker has been designed with the cap posted in mind: between the body of the pen and the cone there are threads (treated with ruthenium) to securely screw the cap.

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Starwalker%20and%20Mesiterstuumlck%20closed_zpsocrqft2m.jpg

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Starwalker%20and%20Meisterstuumlck%20uncapped_zpstpkmvyvh.jpg

When the size of the pen puts it in the range of the Legrand instruments, its weight is very different and distinctive to this line. Whilst a Meisterstück 146 (I have at hand a single-colored nib example of the ’80s for comparison) weights just 25 gr, the Starwalker is almost the double at 43 gr, actuallly a five grams more than the much larger and thicker Meisterstück admiral, the iconic 149.

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Starwalker%20and%20Meisterstuumlck%20posted2_zpsfc4didne.jpg

This makes the pen feeling very substantial in the hand, and I have no doubts that its weight and the quality of the materials to the touch largely contributes to its perception as the product of a high-end brand craftsmanship.

The laser engraving on the body and the cap is impeccable. The lighter parts of the motif consist in bold and fine lines, narrow rectangles, and some empty rectangles, filled with a pattern of perpendicular lines. The laser etching is not white or silver, but rather a warmth, matte, light grey, similar to the color of titanium. The contrasting black is quite deep and shiny, but with some qualities of transparency which I hope to have been able to capture in the photographs. All the metal details, including the nib, are plated with ruthenium, and for this reason they appear very light and highly polished. They are, in fact, much lighter than the details engraved on the body.

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Montblanc%20Starwalker%20body_zpsivt6hijv.jpg

Interestingly, most of the pen weight is in the cap, that with its 18 grams accounts alone for almost half of the total weight. This also means that the writing experience with the pen capped or uncapped is quite different, as the cap moves the balance point of the instrument a big 2.5 cm toward the rear of the body (from 6.8 to 9.2 cm measured from the nib tip). I felt the pen comfortable to write both posted and uncapped, but I slightly prefer not posting the cap, as I like the sensation of the hand freedom when using lighter pens. Looking at the shape of the Starwalker ballpoint pen, with the ogival thickened portion lying on the grip section, I guess that the writing experience should quite the contrary, as the equilibrium point of the instrument should be very close to the tip.

The cap of the Starwalker is, as said, very substantial. It is noteworthy that the the tip of the broad clip extends beyond the lower lip of the cap, so that it can not stand up on the desk when placed on its base. The broad ring of the clip has the writing “MONTBLANC” etched, with three short parallel lines at the beginning and the end of the word, plus the engraving of the serial number. The lower ring, also ruthenium-plated, is narrow and flat. The clip is stiff and springy, and it maintains the pen firmly attached in the pocket of a shirt. I guess that it should also work great on the delicate fabric of the internal pocket of a dress jacket, but it does not seem to be designed to be clipped on thick materials. Finally, and obviously, the true masterpiece of the cap is the white star Montblanc logo floating in, and permanently suspended within the transparent resin of the apical cone. The logo can be barely seen from the side, due to its thinness, but it is perfectly shaped, like all the others Montblanc pens, when seen form the top. It is a really delicate touch, unique to the Starwalker range. When the cap is screwed on the body, the clip is aligned with the axis of the nib: another attentive touch that I very much appreciate.

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Montblanc%20Starwalker%20cap_zpskyvnvfyl.jpg

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Montblanc%20Starwalker%20floating%20star_zpsgqu475ue.jpg

Looking at the body, it is gently fusiform, tapering very gradually toward the cone, which is ogival and rounded at the apex. The cone is metallic, ruthenium-plated, with two black, shiny rings at the base, which enclose the threads to screw the cap. On the other end, the resin body steps down into the metal threads where the cap screws. The step is quite negligible, as the front end of the body and the grip just have a difference in diameter size of about half millimetre. Due to my way to hold the pen – which is pretty “normal” –, the medium finger lays directly on the metal threads, a detail that could be fastidious to others: I personally do not care about. Using the pen posted would further take out most of the weight from the fingers.

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Montblanc%20Starwalker%20cone_zpspznym8y0.jpg

Just under the grip, with a perfect and almost invisible joint, the grip is screwed within the body. It is also made of metal, but I find it not particularly slippery. Between the grip and the nib there is another ruthenium-plated ring, more than 1 mm thick, which is completely matte, with a gross sandblasted texture. The grip has to be unscrewed to charge the cartridges, as the filling system of the pen is cartridge only. I do usually prefer my pens with a piston, or having at least he possibility to be filled with a converter, which apparently is possible also with a Starwalker fountain pen. With 14 different types to choose from, including permanent inks, the range of colors that Montblanc offers in its cartridge inks is quite amazing nonetheless, and my gift of the Starwalker was actually complemented with boxes of Royal blue, Burgundy red and Lavender purple cartridges, the latter two of which I had never tried before.

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Montblanc%20Starwalker%20nib%201_zps3dlz3flh.jpg

The nib is 14K gold (585au, as engraved on the nib), plated with ruthenium to maintain the general scheme of the pen’s colors. My Starwalker has a medium nib, and it lays down a consistent, regular, and quite wet line of ink. The width of the “medium” line is very comparable to that of the medium nibs that I have on my Meisterstück 149 and on my Bohéme Big Size. The shape of the nib, however, is completely different geometrically. Whilst the nibs of the Meisterstück line are “winged”, made out of a flat and thin gold plate slightly and gently bent along the medium margins, the nib of the Starwalker is carved out from a somewhat conic shape. To be more precise, the bending of the basal and lateral margins in of the Starwalker nib is quite abrupt, making it more hemi-rectangular than hemi-circular in section. This gives to the nib its characteristically firm behaviour. Modern Montblanc nibs lack in general any true flexibility, but nonetheless due to their pretty large size, those of the Meisterstück line are quite responsive and may flexed. The nib of the Starwalker can not be flexed, even though in an expert hand the tines can be slightly opened under the correct pressure to produce a bit of line variations.

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Montblanc%20Starwalker%20nib%202_zpsgu6b3iim.jpg

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Montblanc%20Starwalker%20nib%203_zpsjgmhqoo8.jpg

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Montblanc%20Starwalker%20feeder_zpsixl4buoh.jpg

At the end of this review, I include a couple of images with some quick drawings made with my new Starwalker. As the nib is pretty stiff, it is particularly good to make cross-etched drawings due its regular and consistent line.

To conclude, the Starwalker Black Mystery is in my opinion a very elegant and classy pen, with a modern design that does not pass unnoticed, realised meticulously and with care. I did not find it a pen to be considered for calligraphic purposes as the nib is too hard to be flexed at any angle, but it may prove to be a really interesting writing instrument for other applications: I just thing about architectural sketches and graphic drawings as examples. To me, the Starwalker Black Mystery looks as a very professional, hi-tech instrument, maybe with that bit of understatement that would feel perfect in a meeting or in the board room. It is a pen that makes a subtle and stylish statement, retaining the allure of Montblanc but with a very own and unique design, away from the more traditional (and sometimes too much recognizable) style of the brand.

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Montblanc%20Starwalker%20amp%20loupes%201_zpszmfterkj.jpg

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Montblanc%20Starwalker%20amp%20loupes%203_zps5xlk1kqe.jpg

Besides the Starwalker Black Mystery fountain pen, some of the photographs (as well as the drawing also features some of my watches and my magnifiers, or loupes (mostly folding models). I ask your pardon, as they are just some other of my acceptable illnesses…

Thank you for reading.

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Congratulations on your new pen!, good drawings as well, I'm drawn more and more to the starwalker might get one in EF or BB :)

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Excellent review all around! Very informative, very detailed, and the pictures were fantastic. The comparisons to other Montblancs were also nice. Very good review, and a very nice pen!

"Oh deer."

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Wow. Amazing review. I also have the same fountain pen and agree on every single point.

 

D.

Never try and teach a pig to sing: it wastes your time and annoys the pig

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Very fine review, thank you. Well written and illustrated, you make a gift of your time.

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  On 7/21/2015 at 1:47 AM, fpupulin said:

Since my first encounter with a Montblanc 149 when I was still a teenager, I have been irresistibly drawn to the range of black and gold pens that Montblanc proudly call his Meisterstück line. My two Writer Editions pens are, in fact, grossly built on a Meisterstück 139 body, and they share the same nib of my modern 149s.

 

The only Montblanc outside the range of Meisterstück (and siblings) that I own is a Bohéme Big Size, a great pen that I amazingly and quite incredibly find in Costa Rica and that I previously review on this same forum (http:/www.fountainpennetwork.com/forum/topic/206497-montblanc-boheme-big-size-another-review/).

 

It has been therefore a double pleasure when two of my dearest friends, coming back from a journey to Europe, surprised me with the gift of a Montblanc Starwalker Black Mystery, still in its pristine package as prepared at the Champs-Elysées Montblanc boutique in Paris.

 

 

 

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Montblanc%20Starwalker%20capped%20%20watch_zpsly6bypkz.jpg

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Montblanc%20Starwalker%20uncapped%20%202%20watches%201_zpsxoukmmdy.jpg

I confess that the Starwalker range was quite a mystery (but not a black one…) for me, even though I superficially appreciated the modern shape of the pens and the fantastic idea of the star floating within the transparent acrylic dome of their cap’s top. But here I am, with my shiny new Montblanc Starwalker between the fingers, and as I found not so many discussions and reviews of this fountain pen, I thought it was worthy presenting my beautiful example to my “friends in pens”.

 

The Starwalker collection (including fountain pen, fine liner, ballpoint pen, and mechanical pencil) was originally introduced in 2003 and aimed to a younger target than the Meisterstück line, interested in a “chic” writing instrument made out of extraordinary materials, but pushing the boundaries of traditional design beyond the old-school look of classic fountain pens. I think that Montblanc was successful in making its Starwalker range immediately recognizable for its cutting-edge design, a synthesis of ergonomics and futuristic shapes, and to set it to the highest standards of quality in terms of materials and finishing details, which buyers are actually expecting from the brand.

 

Within the Starwalker line, the Black Mystery design was launched in 2010 and, according to Montblanc, the linear pattern engraved by laser on the body and the cap of the pens was inspired by the lights of Manhattan at night. The abstract graphic motif is indeed quite discreet but unquestionably modern and distinctive enough to become a brand contemporary classic. The urban, hi-tech Black Mystery pattern was eminently intended for a men public, and in the last years it has become an emblematic motif among Montblanc collections. Besides the writing instruments, the Black Mystery motif has been embossed in the leather of the 4810 Westside Black Mystery goods and, more recently, it inspired the lightweight products of the 4810 Westside Black Mystery Canvas line.

 

 

The fountain pen

 

At 14 cm when capped, 12.5 cm uncapped, and 15 long cm when posted, the Black Mystery is a full sized pen that you can easily compare to a Meisterstück 146 in general size. The two pens are exactly the same length when uncapped, but the 146 is about 1 cm longer when capped. I usually do not post my pens, but the Starwalker has been designed with the cap posted in mind: between the body of the pen and the cone there are threads (treated with ruthenium) to securely screw the cap.

 

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Starwalker%20and%20Mesiterstuumlck%20closed_zpsocrqft2m.jpg

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Starwalker%20and%20Meisterstuumlck%20uncapped_zpstpkmvyvh.jpg

When the size of the pen puts it in the range of the Legrand instruments, its weight is very different and distinctive to this line. Whilst a Meisterstück 146 (I have at hand a single-colored nib example of the ’80s for comparison) weights just 25 gr, the Starwalker is almost the double at 43 gr, actuallly a five grams more than the much larger and thicker Meisterstück admiral, the iconic 149.

 

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Starwalker%20and%20Meisterstuumlck%20posted2_zpsfc4didne.jpg

This makes the pen feeling very substantial in the hand, and I have no doubts that its weight and the quality of the materials to the touch largely contributes to its perception as the product of a high-end brand craftsmanship.

 

The laser engraving on the body and the cap is impeccable. The lighter parts of the motif consist in bold and fine lines, narrow rectangles, and some empty rectangles, filled with a pattern of perpendicular lines. The laser etching is not white or silver, but rather a warmth, matte, light grey, similar to the color of titanium. The contrasting black is quite deep and shiny, but with some qualities of transparency which I hope to have been able to capture in the photographs. All the metal details, including the nib, are plated with ruthenium, and for this reason they appear very light and highly polished. They are, in fact, much lighter than the details engraved on the body.

 

 

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Montblanc%20Starwalker%20body_zpsivt6hijv.jpg

 

Interestingly, most of the pen weight is in the cap, that with its 18 grams accounts alone for almost half of the total weight. This also means that the writing experience with the pen capped or uncapped is quite different, as the cap moves the balance point of the instrument a big 2.5 cm toward the rear of the body (from 6.8 to 9.2 cm measured from the nib tip). I felt the pen comfortable to write both posted and uncapped, but I slightly prefer not posting the cap, as I like the sensation of the hand freedom when using lighter pens. Looking at the shape of the Starwalker ballpoint pen, with the ogival thickened portion lying on the grip section, I guess that the writing experience should quite the contrary, as the equilibrium point of the instrument should be very close to the tip.

 

The cap of the Starwalker is, as said, very substantial. It is noteworthy that the the tip of the broad clip extends beyond the lower lip of the cap, so that it can not stand up on the desk when placed on its base. The broad ring of the clip has the writing “MONTBLANC” etched, with three short parallel lines at the beginning and the end of the word, plus the engraving of the serial number. The lower ring, also ruthenium-plated, is narrow and flat. The clip is stiff and springy, and it maintains the pen firmly attached in the pocket of a shirt. I guess that it should also work great on the delicate fabric of the internal pocket of a dress jacket, but it does not seem to be designed to be clipped on thick materials. Finally, and obviously, the true masterpiece of the cap is the white star Montblanc logo floating in, and permanently suspended within the transparent resin of the apical cone. The logo can be barely seen from the side, due to its thinness, but it is perfectly shaped, like all the others Montblanc pens, when seen form the top. It is a really delicate touch, unique to the Starwalker range. When the cap is screwed on the body, the clip is aligned with the axis of the nib: another attentive touch that I very much appreciate.

 

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Montblanc%20Starwalker%20cap_zpskyvnvfyl.jpg

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Montblanc%20Starwalker%20floating%20star_zpsgqu475ue.jpg

Looking at the body, it is gently fusiform, tapering very gradually toward the cone, which is ogival and rounded at the apex. The cone is metallic, ruthenium-plated, with two black, shiny rings at the base, which enclose the threads to screw the cap. On the other end, the resin body steps down into the metal threads where the cap screws. The step is quite negligible, as the front end of the body and the grip just have a difference in diameter size of about half millimetre. Due to my way to hold the pen – which is pretty “normal” –, the medium finger lays directly on the metal threads, a detail that could be fastidious to others: I personally do not care about. Using the pen posted would further take out most of the weight from the fingers.

 

 

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Montblanc%20Starwalker%20cone_zpspznym8y0.jpg

Just under the grip, with a perfect and almost invisible joint, the grip is screwed within the body. It is also made of metal, but I find it not particularly slippery. Between the grip and the nib there is another ruthenium-plated ring, more than 1 mm thick, which is completely matte, with a gross sandblasted texture. The grip has to be unscrewed to charge the cartridges, as the filling system of the pen is cartridge only. I do usually prefer my pens with a piston, or having at least he possibility to be filled with a converter, which apparently is possible also with a Starwalker fountain pen. With 14 different types to choose from, including permanent inks, the range of colors that Montblanc offers in its cartridge inks is quite amazing nonetheless, and my gift of the Starwalker was actually complemented with boxes of Royal blue, Burgundy red and Lavender purple cartridges, the latter two of which I had never tried before.

 

 

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Montblanc%20Starwalker%20nib%201_zps3dlz3flh.jpg

The nib is 14K gold (585au, as engraved on the nib), plated with ruthenium to maintain the general scheme of the pen’s colors. My Starwalker has a medium nib, and it lays down a consistent, regular, and quite wet line of ink. The width of the “medium” line is very comparable to that of the medium nibs that I have on my Meisterstück 149 and on my Bohéme Big Size. The shape of the nib, however, is completely different geometrically. Whilst the nibs of the Meisterstück line are “winged”, made out of a flat and thin gold plate slightly and gently bent along the medium margins, the nib of the Starwalker is carved out from a somewhat conic shape. To be more precise, the bending of the basal and lateral margins in of the Starwalker nib is quite abrupt, making it more hemi-rectangular than hemi-circular in section. This gives to the nib its characteristically firm behaviour. Modern Montblanc nibs lack in general any true flexibility, but nonetheless due to their pretty large size, those of the Meisterstück line are quite responsive and may flexed. The nib of the Starwalker can not be flexed, even though in an expert hand the tines can be slightly opened under the correct pressure to produce a bit of line variations.

 

 

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Montblanc%20Starwalker%20nib%202_zpsgu6b3iim.jpg

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Montblanc%20Starwalker%20nib%203_zpsjgmhqoo8.jpg

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Montblanc%20Starwalker%20feeder_zpsixl4buoh.jpg

 

At the end of this review, I include a couple of images with some quick drawings made with my new Starwalker. As the nib is pretty stiff, it is particularly good to make cross-etched drawings due its regular and consistent line.

 

To conclude, the Starwalker Black Mystery is in my opinion a very elegant and classy pen, with a modern design that does not pass unnoticed, realised meticulously and with care. I did not find it a pen to be considered for calligraphic purposes as the nib is too hard to be flexed at any angle, but it may prove to be a really interesting writing instrument for other applications: I just thing about architectural sketches and graphic drawings as examples. To me, the Starwalker Black Mystery looks as a very professional, hi-tech instrument, maybe with that bit of understatement that would feel perfect in a meeting or in the board room. It is a pen that makes a subtle and stylish statement, retaining the allure of Montblanc but with a very own and unique design, away from the more traditional (and sometimes too much recognizable) style of the brand.

 

 

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Montblanc%20Starwalker%20amp%20loupes%201_zpszmfterkj.jpg

http://i1311.photobucket.com/albums/s677/Franco_Pupulin/Montblanc%20Starwalker%20amp%20loupes%203_zps5xlk1kqe.jpg

 

Besides the Starwalker Black Mystery fountain pen, some of the photographs (as well as the drawing also features some of my watches and my magnifiers, or loupes (mostly folding models). I ask your pardon, as they are just some other of my acceptable illnesses…

 

Thank you for reading.

What watches? I didn't see any Omegas!
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  • 4 months later...

Great review!!! I know some people don't value Starwalker nib very much, but I find it is a very good writer. It also appeals to a younger audience, and I quite like the design. I bought one for my son as a Christmas present because he finds the design more appealing to Meistersuck's.

Inked: Sailor King Pro Gear, Sailor Nagasawa Proske, Sailor 1911 Standard, Parker Sonnet Chiselled Carbon, Parker 51, Pilot Custom Heritage 92, Platinum Preppy

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Excellent review. Great photography and your drawings are wonderful. The StarWalker line is my favorite of the Montblanc styles. I have a few 146s and Limited Editions, however, I'm alway drawn towards my StarWalkers. The weight of the metal versions are fantastic. The resin versions are too light for my taste and they don't have that solid build quality I find distinctive in heavy pens.

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    • lamarax 11 Apr 0:49
      Of course trade wars are much, more important than the prices of consumer products. The true intention is to weaken the dollar, so that the Chinese start selling their US held debt. But the dollar being the defacto world reserve currency, it doesn't lose value that easily. So the idea is to target trade through artificially raising prices. Problem is, inflation will skyrocket. Good luck with that.
    • lamarax 11 Apr 0:33
      Guess who loses
    • lamarax 11 Apr 0:30
      In Europe, the only (truly) American produced brand is Esterbrook AFAIK. Tariffs will make Esterbrook products compete on the same level as some high-end European brands (let's say Aurora), while clearly the product is manufactured to compete on a much lower price level.
    • lamarax 11 Apr 0:24
      So let's say you want to buy a Montblanc or whatever. You pay the current tariff on top of the usual price, unless your local distributor is willing to absorb (some) of the difference
    • lamarax 11 Apr 0:20
      Tariffs are paid by the importer, not the exporter.
    • TheQuillDeal 10 Apr 2:44
      Can anyone explain how the tariff war will affect fountain pen prices??
    • Penguincollector 30 Mar 15:07
      Oh yes, pictures are on the “ I got this pen today” thread.
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      Is it here yet?
    • Penguincollector 26 Mar 5:00
      I just got the tracking information for my Starwalker💃🏻
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      @lamarax I am horrified... And slightly intrigued. But mostly just scared.
    • lamarax 2 Mar 20:38
      Oh well. In case of failure you can always wring the paper to have a nice -albeit somewhat stale- cup of coffee back.
    • T.D. Rabbit 2 Mar 10:20
      @Astronymus I could use cornstarch... Or i could distill it and make it very concentrated.
    • T.D. Rabbit 2 Mar 10:20
      @lamarax That's what I used! (In reply to black coffee).. But the milk might not be good at all for paper.
    • Grayfeather 2 Mar 0:08
      Good day, all.
    • Gertrude F 20 Feb 17:58
      Sorry think I posted this in the wrong place. Used to be a user, just re-upped. Be kind. 😑
    • Gertrude F 20 Feb 17:56
      Looking to sell huge lot of pretty much every Man 200 made - FP, BP, MP, one or two RBs. Does anyone have a suggestion for a bulk purhase house? Thanks - and hope this doesn't violate any rules.
    • lamarax 17 Feb 18:05
      Cappuccino should work. Frothy milk also helps to lubricate the nib. But it has to be made by a barista.
    • Astronymus 17 Feb 16:19
      YOu might need to thicken the coffee with something. I admit I have no idea with what. But I'm pretty sure it would work.
    • asnailmailer 3 Feb 17:35
      it is incowrimo time and only very few people are tempting me
    • lamarax 31 Jan 21:34
      Try black coffee. No sugar.
    • T.D. Rabbit 31 Jan 8:11
      Coffee is too light to write with though I've tried.
    • Astronymus 29 Jan 21:46
      You can use coffee and all other kinds of fluid with a glas pen. 😉
    • Roger Zhao 29 Jan 14:37
      chocolate is yummy
    • Bucefalo 17 Jan 9:59
      anyone sells vacumatic push button shafts
    • stxrling 13 Jan 1:25
      Are there any threads or posts up yet about the California Pen Show in February, does anyone know?
    • lamarax 10 Jan 20:27
      Putting coffee in a fountain pen is far more dangerous
    • asnailmailer 9 Jan 0:09
      Don't drink the ink
    • zug zug 8 Jan 16:48
      Coffee inks or coffee, the drink? Both are yummy though.
    • LandyVlad 8 Jan 5:37
      I hear the price of coffee is going up. WHich is bad because I like coffee.
    • asnailmailer 6 Jan 14:43
      time for a nice cup of tea
    • Just J 25 Dec 1:57
      @liauyat re editing profile: At forum page top, find the Search panel. Just above that you should see your user name with a tiny down arrow [🔽] alongside. Click that & scroll down to CONTENT, & under that, Profile. Click that, & edit 'til thy heart's content!
    • liapuyat 12 Dec 12:20
      I can't seem to edit my profile, which is years out of date, because I've only returned to FPN again recently. How do you fix it?
    • mattaw 5 Dec 14:25
      @lantanagal did you do anything to fix that? I get that page every time I try to go to edit my profile...
    • Penguincollector 30 Nov 19:14
      Super excited to go check out the PDX Pen Bazaar today. I volunteered to help set up tables. It should be super fun, followed by Xmas tree shopping. 😁
    • niuben 30 Nov 10:41
      @Nurse Ratchet
    • Nurse Ratchet 30 Nov 2:49
      Newbie here!!! Helloall
    • Emes 25 Nov 23:31
      jew
    • Misfit 9 Nov 2:38
      lantanagal, I’ve only seen that happen when you put someone on the ignore list. I doubt a friend would do that.
    • lantanagal 7 Nov 19:01
      UPDATE - FIXED NOW Exact message is: Requested page not available! Dear Visitor of the Fountain Pen Nuthouse The page you are requesting to visit is not available to you. You are not authorised to access the requested page. Regards, The FPN Admin Team November 7, 2024
    • lantanagal 7 Nov 18:59
      UPDATE - FIXED NOW Trying to send a pen friend a reply to a message, keep getting an error message to say I don't have access. Anyone any ideas? (tried logging our and back in to no avail)
    • Dr.R 2 Nov 16:58
      Raina’s
    • fireant 2 Nov 1:36
      Fine-have you had a nibmeister look at it?
    • carlos.q 29 Oct 15:19
      @FineFinerFinest: have you seen this thread? https://www.fountainpennetwor...nging-pelikan-nibs/#comments
    • FineFinerFinest 24 Oct 8:52
      No replies required to my complaints about the Pelikan. A friend came to the rescue with some very magnification equipment - with the images thrown to a latge high res screen. Technology is a wonderful thing. Thanks to Mercian for the reply. I had been using the same paper & ink for sometime when the "singing" started. I have a theory but no proof that nibs get damaged when capping the pen. 👍
    • Mercian 22 Oct 22:28
      @FineFinerFinest: sometimes nib-'singing' can be lessened - or even cured - by changing the ink that one is putting through the pen, or the paper that one is using. N.b. *sometimes*. Good luck
    • Bluetaco 22 Oct 22:04
      howdy
    • FineFinerFinest 21 Oct 5:23
      I'm not expecting any replies to my question about the singing Pelikan nib. It seems, from reading the background, that I am not alone. It's a nice pen. It's such a pity Pelikan can't make decent nibs. I have occasionally met users who tell me how wonderful their Pelikan nib is. I've spent enough money to know that not everyone has this experience. I've worked on nibs occasionally over forty years with great success. This one has me beaten. I won't be buying any more Pelikan pens. 👎
    • FineFinerFinest 21 Oct 4:27
      I've had a Pelikan M805 for a couple of years now and cannot get the nib to write without singing. I've worked on dozens of nibs with great success. Ny suggestion about what's going wrong? 😑
    • Bhakt 12 Oct 5:45
      Any feedback in 100th anniversary Mont Blanc green pens?
    • Glens pens 8 Oct 15:08
      @jordierocks94 i happen to have platinum preppy that has wrote like (bleep) since i bought it my second pen....is that something you would wish to practice on?
    • jordierocks94 4 Oct 6:26
      Hello all - New here. My Art studies have spilled me into the ft pen world where I am happily submerged and floating! I'm looking to repair some cheap pens that are starving for ink yet filled, and eventually get new nibs; and development of repair skills (an even longer learning curve than my art studies - lol). Every hobby needs a hobby, eh ...
    • The_Beginner 18 Sept 23:35
      horse notebooks if you search the title should still appear though it wont show you in your proflie
    • Jayme Brener 16 Sept 22:21
      Hi, guys. I wonder if somebody knows who manufactured the Coro fountain pens.
    • TheHorseNotebooks 16 Sept 13:11
      Hello, it's been ages for me since I was here last time. I had a post (http://www.fountainpennetwork...-notebooks/?view=getnewpost) but I see that it is no longer accessible. Is there anyway to retrieve that one?
    • Refujio Rodriguez 16 Sept 5:39
      I have a match stick simplomatic with a weidlich nib. Does anyone know anything about this pen?
    • The_Beginner 15 Sept 16:11
      dusty yes, glen welcome
    • Glens pens 11 Sept 1:22
      Hello, Im new to FPN I'm so happy to find other foutain penattics. collecting almost one year ,thought I would say hello to everyone.
    • DustyBin 8 Sept 14:34
      I haven't been here for ages... do I take it that private sales are no longer allowed? Also used to be a great place to sell and buy some great pens
    • Sailor Kenshin 1 Sept 12:37
      Lol…
    • JungleJim 1 Sept 1:55
      Perhaps it's like saying Beetlejuice 3 times to get that person to appear, though with @Sailor Kenshin you only have to say it twice?
    • Sailor Kenshin 31 Aug 21:06
      ?
    • Duffy 29 Aug 19:31
      @Sailor Kenshin @Sailor Kenshin
    • Seney724 26 Aug 22:07
    • Diablo 26 Aug 22:05
      Thank you so much, Seney724. I really appreciate your help!
    • Seney724 26 Aug 21:43
      I have no ties or relationship. Just a very happy customer. He is a very experienced Montblanc expert.
    • Seney724 26 Aug 21:42
      I strongly recommend Kirk Speer at https://www.penrealm.com/
    • Diablo 26 Aug 21:35
      @Seney724. The pen was recently disassembled and cleaned, but the nib and feed were not properly inserted into the holder. I'm in Maryland.
    • Diablo 26 Aug 21:32
      @Seney724. The nib section needs to be adjusted properly.
    • Seney724 26 Aug 18:16
      @Diablo. Where are you? What does it need?
    • Diablo 26 Aug 16:58
      Seeking EXPERIENCED, REPUTABLE service/repair for my 149. PLEASE help!!!
    • Penguincollector 19 Aug 19:42
      @Marta Val, reach out to @terim, who runs Peyton Street Pens and is very knowledgeable about Sheaffer pens
    • Marta Val 19 Aug 14:35
      Hello, could someone recommend a reliable venue: on line or brick and mortar in Fairfax, VA or Long Island, NY to purchase the soft parts and a converter to restore my dad's Sheaffer Legacy? please. Thanks a mill.
    • The_Beginner 18 Aug 2:49
      is there a guy who we can message to find a part for us with a given timelimit if so please let me know his name!
    • virtuoso 16 Aug 15:15
      what happene to the new Shaeffer inks?
    • Scribs 14 Aug 17:09
      fatehbajwa, in Writing Instruments, "Fountain Pens + Dip Pens First Stop" ?
    • fatehbajwa 14 Aug 12:17
      Back to FPN after 14 years. First thing I noticed is that I could not see a FS forum. What has changed? 🤔
    • Kika 5 Aug 10:22
      Are there any fountain pen collectors in Qatar?
    • T.D. Rabbit 31 July 18:58
      Ahh okay, thanks!
    • Scribs 29 July 18:51
      @ TDRabbit, even better would be in Creative Expressions area, subform The Write Stuff
    • T.D. Rabbit 29 July 11:40
      Okay, thanks!
    • JungleJim 29 July 0:46
      @T.D. Rabbit Try posting it in the "Chatter Forum". You have to be logged in to see it.
    • T.D. Rabbit 28 July 17:54
      Hello! Is there a thread anywhere 'round here where one can post self-composed poetry? If not, would it be alright if I made one? I searched on google, but to no avail...
    • OldFatDog 26 July 19:41
      I have several Parker Roller Ball & Fiber Tip refills in the original packaging. Where and how do I sell them? The couple that I've opened the ink still flowed when put to paper. Also if a pen would take the foller ball refill then it should take the fiber tip as well? Anyway it's been awhile and I'm want to take my message collection beyond the few pieces that I have... Meaning I don't have a Parker these refills will fit in 🙄
    • RegDiggins 23 July 12:40
      Recently was lucky enough to buy a pristine example of the CF crocodile ball with the gold plating. Then of course I faced the same problem we all have over the years ,of trying to find e refill. Fortunately I discovered one here in the U.K. I wonder if there are other sources which exist in other countries, by the way they were not cheap pen
    • The_Beginner 20 July 20:35
      Hows it going guys i have a code from pen chalet that i wont use for 10% off and it ends aug 31st RC10AUG its 10% off have at it fellas
    • T.D. Rabbit 19 July 9:33
      Somewhat confusing and off-putting ones, as said to me by my very honest friends. I don't have an X account though :<
    • piano 19 July 8:41
      @The Devil Rabbit what kind of? Let’s go to X (twitter) with #inkdoodle #inkdoodleFP
    • Mort639 17 July 1:03
      I have a Conway Stewart Trafalgar set. It was previously owned by actor Russell Crowe and includes a letter from him. Can anyone help me with assessing its value?
    • Sailor Kenshin 15 July 17:41
      There must be a couple of places here to share artworks.
    • T.D. Rabbit 15 July 12:45
      Hullo! I really like making ink doodles, and I'd like to share a few. Anywhere on the site I can do so? Thanks in advance!
    • Sailor Kenshin 6 July 17:58
      Pay It Forward.
    • AndWhoDisguisedAs 6 July 16:59
      where would I post wanting to trade bottle of ink straight up?
    • JungleJim 3 July 16:14
      @Bill Wood-- just look at the message below you that was posted by @PAKMAN. He is a moderator here on the forums.
    • Bill Wood 2 July 14:24
      Just checking on a classified section and where we are with that. Many thanks. Bill
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