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Favorite Cursive Italic Pen Or Nib?


Madeline

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My best pens with CI or stub nibs were all custom ground. I prefer to find a pen I like and then do what is necessary to get the type of nib I want. Pendleton Brown is amazing. He has customized nibs for half a dozen of my pens including TWSBs, Levenger Truewriters, and two vintage Esterbrook 9668s. Shawn Newton ground a really nice CI on a Kickstarter pen he made for me. Both Shawn and Pendleton were a joy to work with. The best CI nib I own, in use every day for almost a decade (except for an extended visit to Indy Pen Dance after a cat played with it*) is a Binder 0.9 mm Italifine on a Pelikan M800. The nice thing about the custom grinds was that they all came with a guarantee that they would be right or the nibmeisters would make them right. Most of the original manufacturer CI and stub nibs I bought required some tweaking to make them perfect for me.

Enjoy the journey on this one. These are some thoroughly enjoyable nibs to use.

 

*Pen left uncapped on desk for a few seconds while owner answered phone. Cat saw pen and decided it was a toy. Cats are proof that the earth is not flat because, if it was, cats would have knocked everything off it long ago. Linda did an amazing job repairing the nib. Yes, the cat is still with us. I bought her a Pilot Varsity of her very own which she ignores.

Dave Campbell
Retired Science Teacher and Active Pen Addict
Every day is a chance to reduce my level of ignorance.

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Yes, you are right about custom italics being the best. I have never seen a factory italic that was much more than a stub. Only the custom grinders will take the time, and trust their customers enough, to sharpen up a nib to a real italic.

 

I am sure there are some exceptions, and no doubt someone will promptly provide them, but I have never seen a factory italic that could hold a candle to my Binder, Mottishaw, Minuskin or other custom italics.

 

  On 1/23/2019 at 4:07 AM, kestrel said:

My best pens with CI or stub nibs were all custom ground.

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It's not difficult to grind a medium kugel tip into a cursive italic - flatten the top, angled down a little, flatten the bottom with an upward angle, soften any sharp edges.

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  On 1/23/2019 at 4:07 AM, kestrel said:

... Yes, the cat is still with us. I bought her a Pilot Varsity of her very own which she ignores.

 

Take the cap off.

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  On 1/23/2019 at 8:06 PM, Andrea_R said:

top to bottom: oblique, CI, Stub

 

Great samples! What kind of pen is your CI?

Moderation in everything, including moderation.

--Mark Twain

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  On 1/23/2019 at 4:07 AM, kestrel said:

My best pens with CI or stub nibs were all custom ground. I prefer to find a pen I like and then do what is necessary to get the type of nib I want. Pendleton Brown is amazing. He has customized nibs for half a dozen of my pens including TWSBs, Levenger Truewriters, and two vintage Esterbrook 9668s. Shawn Newton ground a really nice CI on a Kickstarter pen he made for me. Both Shawn and Pendleton were a joy to work with. The best CI nib I own, in use every day for almost a decade (except for an extended visit to Indy Pen Dance after a cat played with it*) is a Binder 0.9 mm Italifine on a Pelikan M800. The nice thing about the custom grinds was that they all came with a guarantee that they would be right or the nibmeisters would make them right. Most of the original manufacturer CI and stub nibs I bought required some tweaking to make them perfect for me.

Enjoy the journey on this one. These are some thoroughly enjoyable nibs to use.

 

*Pen left uncapped on desk for a few seconds while owner answered phone. Cat saw pen and decided it was a toy. Cats are proof that the earth is not flat because, if it was, cats would have knocked everything off it long ago. Linda did an amazing job repairing the nib. Yes, the cat is still with us. I bought her a Pilot Varsity of her very own which she ignores.

Thank you for all of these examples. Your Pelikan sounds particularly wonderful. And I have been admiring the TWSBs done by Pendleton Brown.

 

I've never had a nib wider than a medium. Is a medium nib a good candidate for becoming a cursive italic nib? (Or is a medium considered too narrow to really notice the beauty of a cursive italic?)

Moderation in everything, including moderation.

--Mark Twain

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  On 1/25/2019 at 2:07 AM, madeline said:

Thank you for all of these examples. Your Pelikan sounds particularly wonderful. And I have been admiring the TWSBs done by Pendleton Brown.

 

I've never had a nib wider than a medium. Is a medium nib a good candidate for becoming a cursive italic nib? (Or is a medium considered too narrow to really notice the beauty of a cursive italic?)

The best width for you depends on the size of the letters in your handwriting. I have used CI and stub from 0.7 mm up to 1.5 mm and decided I really liked the 0.9. 1.5 is far too large for my writing, 1.1 is good if I increase the size of my letters a bit, and I don't usually see the line variation enough with 0.7. Richard Binder had an online questionnaire on his website when I ordered the nib that led me to the 0.9 width.

 

This post might give you a better idea of what different nibs produce.

 

https://www.fountainpennetwork.com/forum/topic/311275-eight-modified-nibs-compared/

Dave Campbell
Retired Science Teacher and Active Pen Addict
Every day is a chance to reduce my level of ignorance.

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Thank you, kestrel! My script is not large so that may be why I have stayed with medium nibs thus far. (I have a Pilot Custom 74 medium which actually seems broader than most mediums).

 

And thanks for that additional thread. It was great to see more examples of stub, CI, and what falls in between. I feel like I'm getting closer!

Moderation in everything, including moderation.

--Mark Twain

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  • 3 weeks later...
  On 1/19/2019 at 5:23 PM, _InkyFingers said:

auzzUEI.jpg

 

 

  On 1/20/2019 at 10:32 PM, madeline said:

 

Is it copper or rose-gold? What kind of Aurora is it? Very beautiful (script and pen!)

 

The owner of the pen has not replied, but I would say that it's just the lovely lighting the picture was taken in that makes this Aurora 88 BIG look like it's rose gold, while it's probably a 925 solid silver finish (with gold trim).

Edited by sansenri
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  On 1/19/2019 at 1:45 PM, Herrjaeger said:

Lamy makes stub nibs for their Safari and Al Star pens which are easily interchangeable,

... which are sadly mis-labelled and marketed as Italic nibs.

 

  On 1/18/2019 at 11:29 PM, madeline said:

it would be very interesting to hear what your favorite cursive italic pen(s) might be, either vintage or modern.

Without question, the Extra Fine nib on my Pelikan M600 that Dan Smith customised to a crisp italic for me (and to my specifications).

 

If you're going down the custom-grind path, you may as well decide what you want your custom nib to deliver, and communicate your specific requirements and expectations to the expert nib technician (expert craftsmen, 'nibsmith', or 'nibmeister').

 

  On 1/23/2019 at 3:21 AM, madeline said:

It sounds like a stub nib might be easier to get used to but a CI might provide more line variation and possibly more potential for shading? (given the right paper, ink, etc).

  On 1/25/2019 at 2:07 AM, madeline said:

I've never had a nib wider than a medium. Is a medium nib a good candidate for becoming a cursive italic nib? (Or is a medium considered too narrow to really notice the beauty of a cursive italic?)

A more relevant question is how do you want to 'see' shading, sheen, etc. (and please don't say, "With my eyes!") I can get shading and sheen from an ink like Pilot Iroshizuku kon-peki (on Rhodia Dotpad No.16 80g/m2 white paper) from an Extra Fine nib, but it won't be smack-in-the-face apparent. Your ability to detect shading and sheen with your eyes unaided is certainly going to be a factor, and obviously the narrower the line, the more focussed you need to be to see such characteristics in your handwriting (with the right paper, ink, etc.).

 

I was doing some testing yesterday, and I can draw eleven parallel horizontal lines inside a 5mm square with the PenBBS 308 (with F nib, writing in upside-down orientation) I have, and still see shading and sheen from Sailor Shikiori souten ink with my eyes unaided. However, would that effect be enough for you, and would it manifest in your particular style(s) of handwriting?

I endeavour to be frank and truthful in what I write, show or otherwise present, when I relate my first-hand experiences that are not independently verifiable; and link to third-party content where I can, when I make a claim or refute a statement of fact in a thread. If there is something you can verify for yourself, I entreat you to do so, and judge for yourself what is right, correct, and valid. I may be wrong, and my position or say-so is no more authoritative and carries no more weight than anyone else's here.

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I've yet to get a factory CI nib that I didn't kind of hate. The only stubs I've ever liked from the factory are nemosine 0.6 and 0.8 and my few vintage stubs/obliques. Every other factory stub I've ever had has been scratchy or skipped like hell and all have required major tuning. I don't even like my Mr. Pen italix cursive italic or oblique.

 

That said, a well tuned pilot steel italic nib in a wing sung 698 is a great tool.

Edited by Honeybadgers

Selling a boatload of restored, fairly rare, vintage Japanese gold nib pens, click here to see (more added as I finish restoring them)

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  On 2/15/2019 at 2:45 AM, Honeybadgers said:

I've yet to get a factory CI nib that I didn't kind of hate.

Have you tried a Pilot steel CM (Calligraphy Medium) nib, which I've seen available as factory options (or the only nib supplied) for Prera, MR and Plumix pens?

 

Edit:

  Quote

That said, a well tuned pilot steel italic nib in a wing sung 698 is a great tool.

Oops, sorry, of course you have.

 

The three I have used all wrote OK without skipping out-of-the-box (without tuning on my part).

Edited by A Smug Dill

I endeavour to be frank and truthful in what I write, show or otherwise present, when I relate my first-hand experiences that are not independently verifiable; and link to third-party content where I can, when I make a claim or refute a statement of fact in a thread. If there is something you can verify for yourself, I entreat you to do so, and judge for yourself what is right, correct, and valid. I may be wrong, and my position or say-so is no more authoritative and carries no more weight than anyone else's here.

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  On 2/15/2019 at 2:47 AM, A Smug Dill said:

Have you tried a Pilot steel CM (Calligraphy Medium) nib, which I've seen available as factory options (or the only nib supplied) for Prera, MR and Plumix pens?

 

Edit:

 

Oops, sorry, of course you have.

 

The three I have used all wrote OK without skipping out-of-the-box (without tuning on my part).

 

I've had two CM's and both had a damn burr on an inside tine that made them shear paper horribly. Both have been ground by me into cursive italics with the edges just barely broken and they're my favorite stubs. One is in my wing sung 698 which is ALWAYS inked. I use it for the headers in my journal.

 

I went through three stub bexley 18k's, all were duds (I gave up and just accepted the last dud from vanness because I felt bad that kevin kept sending me nibs that seemed to write well on dips but as soon as they were under the feed's flow, the baby's bottom appeared - it's a lovely soft thing that I'm just going to have custom ground into a CI someday)

 

my pilot VP stub was unusable - Jetpens let me try to fix it but one tine had severe baby's bottom halfway up the slit so I was never going to be able to fix it without eating past the tipping into the gold.

 

I'm also just not someone whose cursive really likes wide nibs, and I don't print often enough for the magic of a stub to show through. Fine stubs are an exception, so when I do get around to ordering my conid, the steel nib I have it come with will be a 0.6 stub. I'm much more like you in my preferences towards very very fine stuff. The more needlepoint the better for me, honestly.

 

I also tend to be prone to a touch of rotation so I have to slow down noticeably to write with a stub, not a ton, but enough that it's not a nice feeling, and I don't think the line variation really adds to my handwriting, so I don't really pursue stubs that often or ink the ones I have apart from the WS 698.

Edited by Honeybadgers

Selling a boatload of restored, fairly rare, vintage Japanese gold nib pens, click here to see (more added as I finish restoring them)

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As a newbie, I'm a little hesitant to join this discussion where you've had such great info but I can add that at the cheaper end of the spectrum, I've found the Plumix nibs are a great starting point in a quest for finer stubs. I have a set of all the sizes and all write well, nice and smooth but with a lovely bit of line variation. I have also used the Nemosine nibs and find the Plumix as good - but better for me as the Plumix have finer sizes. The Plumix can be swopped into many other pens in the Pilot lineup - I have mine in a Metro. I use the F all the time and with some inks it shows shading and sheen on Tomoe River paper. Perhaps a try while you're waiting for something more expensive?

 

These are not as crisp as a custom ground CI nib I recently got from fpnibs.com - but I also find this needs more care when writing - and ink makes a difference, with some of my inks feeling more scratchy than others. I'm heading into serious custom-grind territory as soon as I can afford it - thanks to everyone above for the info on nib customisers, I was just starting to get this info together so it's a real help.

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I’ve had good luck with the Pilot calligraphy M nib. You can try it on the low priced Pilot Plumix, or the Prera. Franklin-Christoph has Mike Masuyama cursive italic and stub nibs (cursive italic shows more line variation). Nemosine, Lamy, TWSBI are all good.

 

Unfortunately for me, my Italix nib was not working well, and I tried different inks. I ended up buying an Edison 1.1mm italic, and it is a nice crisp one.

 

Higher priced, the Visconti 1.3 stub is good with line variation.

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I'm thinking now about the Platinum 3776 as a good candidate for a custom-ground italic. (But that changes by the day... and by my pocketbook : )

 

Thanks for the continuing discussion! The above ideas are fantastic. Especially the discussion about fine vs broad. I am just beginning to learn about sheen and shading and how very much variety there is among the different inks. So so much to take in here. I realize that a bit (or a lot!) of experimentation may be needed, just to determine what my own preferences might be. What a lovely way to spend the snowy winter...

Moderation in everything, including moderation.

--Mark Twain

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a custom CI ground from a 3776 C nib would be a super great pen. I already love the C nib.

 

there is already a stub with the music nib.

Edited by Honeybadgers

Selling a boatload of restored, fairly rare, vintage Japanese gold nib pens, click here to see (more added as I finish restoring them)

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I'd suggest getting a Pilot Plumix or Pluminix and seeing if you want something sharper/blunter or broader/narrower. It sounds as though you've not used an italic before, and some people don't get on with them for whatever reason. (If you can use a William Mitchell broad-edged dip pen on laid paper, of course, you can get on with anything.) Like Purplecate, I also have the other Plumix sizes outside the M and find them all good. While I prefer a crisper italic nib, nothing about the Plumix nibs makes me turn my nose up at them.

 

I have a Sailor Sapporo with a music nib - not unlike your 3776 - custom ground to a relatively crisp italic. I went that route because once you go beyond the price range where Lamys, Twsbis, Plumixes and Osmiroids sit, hardly anyone bothers to offer italic nibs. And where they do, few shops stock them. This is the reason that I, perhaps regrettably, don't have an Omas 360 vintage turquoise or several other pens I'd otherwise have sprung for. Aurora does offer very good, proper italics, and possibly Stipula (which I've never tried).

 

I like my modified Sailor a lot. I went for Sailor simply because I liked their inks so much.

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      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
    • PAKMAN 29 June 1:57
      @inky1 The software for the classified stopped working with the forum. So no we don't have a sales section anymore at FPN
    • inky1 28 June 16:49
      I am not sure which is the classifieds section
    • inky1 28 June 16:46
      IIs there a Fountain Pen Sales board anywhere on here?
    • dave c 25 June 19:01
      Hi. Anybody ever heard about a Royal Puck Pen. Very small but good looking.
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