Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Napkin, despite its name, is an Italian company that produce innovative objects, among which the Forever pens, so called because they will write forever, with no ink or refills or leads - or other consumable parts.

 

AERO Pininfarina - just awarded with the Red Dot Award 2017 for the Product Design category - is a strange pen, light and futuristic.
Its body features a twisted hole that evokes the infinity symbol, made with satin aluminium and electric blue lacquer.

 

post-548-0-91210900-1495035085.jpg

 

And its basement, on the contrary, is not light at all: it's raw concrete.

post-548-0-24093900-1495035113_thumb.jpg

 

It's not a ballpen, nor a pencil (nor a fountain pen, of course!). It writes almost like a pencil, makes a grey line only on paper, and not on fabric or other materials.

post-548-0-77003300-1495035134.jpg

Susanna
----------
Giardino Italiano, il meglio del Made in Italy - www.giardino.it - www.pens.it

My Facebook page
My Blog: blog.giardino.it

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 7
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

  • Susanna

    3

  • MYU

    2

  • EclecticCollector

    1

  • TranquilTrout

    1

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted Images

I paste here the same description you read on my website:
The ETHERGRAF® tip microscopically "scratches" paper, oxidising it and leaving a light but indelible stretch.

Due to its porosity, the common paper - that is the cellulose not treated paper (formed by vegetable fibres bonded through a process that is called "felting") - is in fact a material which perfectly reacts to the passage of the metal tip.

 

Sorry I cannot put the link here, because it's a sale page... but if you click my signature link, you'll easily find it

Susanna
----------
Giardino Italiano, il meglio del Made in Italy - www.giardino.it - www.pens.it

My Facebook page
My Blog: blog.giardino.it

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have the earlier Napkin model.... with the wooden sides and wood burl stand. The tip would be the same.

 

It's a very hardened graphite of some kind. It does write, but requires a lot more pressure than when using a standard pencil, and the line is rather light. It's more of a novelty than a conventional writing instrument.

Edited by MYU

[MYU's Pen Review Corner] | "The Common Ground" -- Jeffrey Small

Link to comment
Share on other sites

To follow on from Myu, there's no oxidation happening at all. It's just a hard graphite that wears down slowly and so will last a long time. I've heard that it works very well on stone papers.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have the earlier Napkin model.... with the wooden sides and wood burl stand. The tip would be the same.

 

This one? Cambiano Pininfarina. It's still available.

 

http://www.giardino.it/pens/napkin/IMMAGINI/PininCambianoPoggiap.jpg

 

To follow on from Myu, there's no oxidation happening at all. It's just a hard graphite that wears down slowly and so will last a long time. I've heard that it works very well on stone papers.

 

It's not graphite, it's a metal alloy.

Leonardo da Vinci invented a similar way for writing without ink, 5 centuries ago (the so-called silverpoint technique)

Susanna
----------
Giardino Italiano, il meglio del Made in Italy - www.giardino.it - www.pens.it

My Facebook page
My Blog: blog.giardino.it

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

This one? Cambiano Pininfarina. It's still available.

 

http://www.giardino.it/pens/napkin/IMMAGINI/PininCambianoPoggiap.jpg

 

 

It's not graphite, it's a metal alloy.

Leonardo da Vinci invented a similar way for writing without ink, 5 centuries ago (the so-called silverpoint technique)

 

Yes, you're right. I meant to say hardened alloy.

 

I bought mine for a very low price on eBay, because the tip was broken off. I figured because of the seam, there must be a way to replace it. Sure enough, it unscrewed with enough force. I contacted Yafa, the parent company, and asked if I could purchase a replacement. They sent me a replacement tip... for free! :thumbup:

 

Pinninfarina_Napkin-4_Ever_01.jpg Pinninfarina_Napkin-4_Ever_02.jpg

[MYU's Pen Review Corner] | "The Common Ground" -- Jeffrey Small

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Are there any real examples of writing with this pen? I'd like to see how it looks.

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...