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Help With Vintage Flexible Fountain Pen Hunting!


Edo98

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  On 3/22/2019 at 5:34 PM, Edo98 said:

 

Thank you for sharing your experience I just reviewed the Mauritian site and I saw some waterman ebonite wet noodle and a super flex and they look quite interesting.
I also noticed that the prices with it are somewhat higher than in other places and I imagine that it is due to what you told me in your comment that the feeder and the nib is perfectly adjusted,
In your opinion, if they are worth the ones that person sells?
Do you notice a big difference in their performance?

 

And which of your two feathers do you enjoy the wet noodle or the super flex for your daily writing?

 

 

I don't know.

Superflex nibs are not as cut and dried as my system shows.....my system is only good for noobies, or those with very few superflex pens.

 

Mauricio and I did a bit of nib horse trading, so I never looked up what he would have charged, for two medium quality 52 wet noodles. I was more interested in the nib than the looks of the pen..............from the pictures he has some top of the line pens.....for pretty.

He is not cheap..........you have to depend on his knowledge to how much and how easy the nib flexes.

I wouldn't dream of taking apart those two pens.....

 

It could well be the better one has or is attempting to master Spencerian, the more one can tell how perfect the nib is......................but there is so much flex variance in superflex.(And one wants to strive to stay one width under max because of metal fatigue.)

Those who can write are more interested in fast snapback than how wide they can draw a letter.

 

I lucked out when I took my wet noodle Soennecken nib off and put it back on my Frankie Soennecken. I being 'noobie'...had a thought of putting it on a 'better' pen.... :( Nope....so back it went.

The nib and feed are Soennecken, the cap could be from a Soennecken school pen, in it is missing the circle in the final, but the cap ring looks somewhat like some of the Soennecken cap rings. The body has no markings.

I was pretty 'noobie' when I got that pen...........got it cheap in it was a Frankie. It is my best wet noodle.......and defiantly now that I know better, I'm not going to go looking for perfection by taking it apart many, many times...

....If I hit the lottery, I would send it to Mauricio to see if he can fiddle it to being better.

 

You have great handwriting. So the jump to drawing letters to do Spencerian or Copperplate will not be to hard.

 

Mauricio's experience not only of setting up a nib, but that the nib does what it's supposed to do. I have one 7 X wet noodle from him..........it is a tad strange, it starts out in the flex journey as Easy Full Flex, then half way it switches into Wet Noodle. It is a 7 X nib.........from EEF to BBB.

The other is a smoother in it's transition, but is a 6 X.

 

I do have other superflex nibs, that I lucked into. Easy Full Flex +, or Wet Noodle minus......one time I'll say yes, a wet noodle, the next time....not quite.

They are all superflex. I can have fun with a 5-6 X Easy Full Flex....the Wet Noodle is a bit easier....but I'm not a good writer.....I don't practice.............I basically scribble to an F with them, in I have to sweat to make the nib write EEF, think to make it write EF.

 

 

Mauricio don't care for my flex system when it gets to superflex............which I've said for the longest time is more a guide for superflex 'noobies', in the more superflex pens one has, there is a lot and can only be a blurring of any definition borders I set.

 

Superflex outside of the Ahab, has to do with ease of tine spread and amount. (One can do the Ahab/Pilot mod to the Ahab nib and make it a nice Easy Full Flex.........save a hell of a lot of money. It is a fun nib..........I was disappointed in the semi-flex superflex Ahab nib...so the pen stayed in the cigar humidor. A nice poster added that Ahab Mod to it for me, and it stayed out in the pen cup for a year.

My flex rating system is based off you having a regular flex nibbed pen...Japanese Soft, if you don't have a Vintage US pen with that flex or a Pelikan 200 or 120 or '82-97 400....or Geha piston School pen.

 

Superflex goes from 4X to mostly 5-6 X to the rare 7X....outside of the now sprung nibs on Youtube and writing examples of just sprung nibs............lots of sprung nibs for sale.

 

There is a good poster who thinks a wet noodle has slow snapback...

Fast snapback is what the writers over in the penmanship sub sections want.............in stead of wide fat lines.

My superflex wet noodles seem to be pretty quick.....but I'm not a real writer.....just a scribbler.

So if you are buying a superflexed nib from Mauricio, you have to inform him you want fast snapback in a priority. How wide do you want your nib to flex.................7 X is rare....well working 7 X is. Will a nice smooth 5 X wet noodle do............or can you get by with a 5 X Easy Full Flex. I do have a post war Pelikan 100n in that.

I do strive to keep it at 4X as a max, in I have read Richard Binder's article on metal fatigue. I get aq nice fancy line, and if I want to hit 5 X, then I pick which letter to do so.....but don't do that often in a paragraph. If I knew what I was doing I could show the nib can do more than what I'm asking for it, and you'd know it.........................but all I do is scribble.

 

When it gets into superflex..........Easy Full Flex flexes at 1/8th the pressure needed to mash a regular flex to it's max of 3 X a light down stroke. Wet Noodle at 1/16.

Weak Kneed Wet Noodles....a term invented by the English nib grinder John Sowobada (sp)...I have run into it............don't want...would really require I learn to write. A '20's MB Safety Pen had such a nib.

Dip pens can have much better, nibs than wet noodles. I've dip pen nibs that make Wet Noodles look Uncooked.

The Reality Show is a riveting result of 23% being illiterate, and 60% reading at a 6th grade or lower level.

      Banker's bonuses caused all the inch problems, Metric cures.

Ransom Bucket cost me many of my pictures taken by a poor camera that was finally tossed. Luckily, the Chicken Scratch pictures also vanished.

The cheapest lessons are from those who learned expensive lessons. Ignorance is best for learning expensive lessons.

 

 

 

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"""""We really need to teach people to stop hyperflexing a wet noodle. A 1mm-2mm shade is hugely dramatic with an EF or needlepoint normal line. Most spencerian wouldn't call for more than 1mm at its absolute most dramatic of flourishes. Over-flexed lines look chunky and inelegant."""""

 

The '30's is rather late in the Flex Era..............I'm not sure when the Waterman Pink nibs were being still made.into the '30's but think so............in the '30's Waterman was not after tine spread but tine bend. They were after 3X tine spread.....to go with superflex tine bend.

So we are all over stressing our fountain pen nibs..... :lticaptd: A Pink Nib is a 3 X nib??? :( :wacko: :wallbash:

 

Yes with a bit of experience...so one has some feeling....you can feel the limits of a superflex nib.

one of the reasons I suggest working up the flex ladder, one can tell if a nib will do 5 X, 6X or the rare 7X............one is not 'writing' but testing to what ever X..............in one wants to stay one width lower than max....

 

I believe I read once, that a sprung superflex nib can be repaired....not to the same width, nor with the same snapback.

 

It is possible to slice and dice around the breather hole, and grind little half moons on cheap flex nibs to get the 'basic' 8 X tine spread nib that many noobies spring their real nibs to get. If you want your nib to do Olympic Splits..............get a cheap over-modified, last a year with luck nib and abuse it.

 

Heritage nibs should be left to the generations to come....the same with heritage pens.........I Do Not Agree with it's your pen to ruin as you wish........such barbarians should be ostracized. Let them hang out on the Ball Point Com!!!

 

It don't matter with dip pen nibs, they can often make a wet noodle look uncooked.

Dip pen nibs....(once the nib was called the pen) will do much more than one even dreams in Superflex....and if one ruins one, it is not the end of the world..............

Sigh....mean grumbles deleted.

I did work my way up the flex ladder.................it's too bad I didn't nor don't practice. (Missing boot kicking smilie)

The Reality Show is a riveting result of 23% being illiterate, and 60% reading at a 6th grade or lower level.

      Banker's bonuses caused all the inch problems, Metric cures.

Ransom Bucket cost me many of my pictures taken by a poor camera that was finally tossed. Luckily, the Chicken Scratch pictures also vanished.

The cheapest lessons are from those who learned expensive lessons. Ignorance is best for learning expensive lessons.

 

 

 

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  On 3/24/2019 at 9:12 AM, Honeybadgers said:

Kind of. Sort of. Not really.

 

Yes, it is an increased point of stress. Sort of. Part of the breather is stress relief. Part of it is aesthetics. Part of it is to cover up an ugly slit cut at the end.

 

There are lots of ludicrously flexible nibs with no breather at all. I've also never seen an overcut nib fracture at that point. The stress is still being taken up almost exclusively by the breather,

 

If you (the "user," not pointing at you Intensity) are flexing a wet noodle so far that you fracture it at the breathers... You are the problem. Not the pen. The problem is between your ears.

 

We really need to teach people to stop hyperflexing a wet noodle. A 1mm-2mm shade is hugely dramatic with an EF or needlepoint normal line. Most spencerian wouldn't call for more than 1mm at its absolute most dramatic of flourishes. Over-flexed lines look chunky and inelegant.

 

Im going by the advice in this older thread:

https://www.fountainpennetwork.com/forum/topic/257284-is-this-a-cracked-nib/

 

Particularly RonZs post on the first page. Its not necessarily that such a nib will develop a crack, but its a point of weakness vs a nib with no slit overshoot. If one is going to invest in a vintage gold nib specifically for flex writing purposes, Id recommend a nib without such an overshoot to have a bit more security in the integrity of the nib in the long run. Unless its a cheap enough pen/nib.

Edited by Intensity
  On 3/31/2019 at 3:12 PM, the-smell-of-dust-after-rain said:

“I admit it, I'm surprised that fountain pens are a hobby. ... it's a bit like stumbling into a fork convention - when you've used a fork all your life.” 

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  On 3/24/2019 at 6:58 PM, Bo Bo Olson said:

"""""We really need to teach people to stop hyperflexing a wet noodle. A 1mm-2mm shade is hugely dramatic with an EF or needlepoint normal line. Most spencerian wouldn't call for more than 1mm at its absolute most dramatic of flourishes. Over-flexed lines look chunky and inelegant."""""

 

The '30's is rather late in the Flex Era..............I'm not sure when the Waterman Pink nibs were being still made.into the '30's but think so............in the '30's Waterman was not after tine spread but tine bend. They were after 3X tine spread.....to go with superflex tine bend.

So we are all over stressing our fountain pen nibs..... :lticaptd: A Pink Nib is a 3 X nib??? :( :wacko: :wallbash:

 

Yes with a bit of experience...so one has some feeling....you can feel the limits of a superflex nib.

one of the reasons I suggest working up the flex ladder, one can tell if a nib will do 5 X, 6X or the rare 7X............one is not 'writing' but testing to what ever X..............in one wants to stay one width lower than max....

 

I believe I read once, that a sprung superflex nib can be repaired....not to the same width, nor with the same snapback.

 

It is possible to slice and dice around the breather hole, and grind little half moons on cheap flex nibs to get the 'basic' 8 X tine spread nib that many noobies spring their real nibs to get. If you want your nib to do Olympic Splits..............get a cheap over-modified, last a year with luck nib and abuse it.

 

Heritage nibs should be left to the generations to come....the same with heritage pens.........I Do Not Agree with it's your pen to ruin as you wish........such barbarians should be ostracized. Let them hang out on the Ball Point Com!!!

 

It don't matter with dip pen nibs, they can often make a wet noodle look uncooked.

Dip pen nibs....(once the nib was called the pen) will do much more than one even dreams in Superflex....and if one ruins one, it is not the end of the world..............

Sigh....mean grumbles deleted.

I did work my way up the flex ladder.................it's too bad I didn't nor don't practice. (Missing boot kicking smilie)

 

Thank you for providing your experience is quite informative and the time I am quite impressed how coarse the world of flexible fountain pens can be, there are quite a few options and levels of flexibility.
Thank you for praising my writing I spend a lot of time writing with my fountain pens for me there is no greater pleasure n this life than writing with these beautiful writing instruments admire their beauty and what they are able to write and the smooth feeling that They provide something that the ballpoint could never give me, the rollerballs enlarge me but they do not compare to the fountain pens. :P

 

My family and friends believe that I am crazy to spend money on fountain pens and spend hours writing in my notebook :lticaptd: but we all have a vice and this is quite satisfactory.
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I was communicating with the seller about some models that he has for sale in peyton street pens and I told him that it will be my first fountain pen and he told me the following:

If you'd like a good introduction to a flex before you make a $ 400 commitment, you might try one of our new old stock Eversharp Symphony pens
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
They are in condition new old stock fine flexible nib and at a fairly affordable price, he recommends them to me because I'm just starting out on this from the vintage flexible fountain pens before I get one of higher value.
What do you think of the symphony 713?
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Analyzing the situation well before buying an expensive flexible fountain pen I would like to have some practice and experience in flexion to get the maximum potential.

 

And the cheapest option to get this experience is with the dip pen, so I just bought a dip nibs and holder and an ink for dip pens online.
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Great idea! I started out with dip nibs years ago and then more recently for copperplate practice. They were what got me interested in flexible nib fountain pens, which I did not realize existed (up to that point, my experiences with fountain pens were limited to rigid nibs). Make sure to get an oblique holder for dip nibs too! If you want to practice something like Copperplate.

  On 3/31/2019 at 3:12 PM, the-smell-of-dust-after-rain said:

“I admit it, I'm surprised that fountain pens are a hobby. ... it's a bit like stumbling into a fork convention - when you've used a fork all your life.” 

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new old stock Eversharp Symphony pens

 

I'm not in the states or I'd had that dial a flex Eversharp '40's nib a long time ago. It had a bar on the top of the nib slit, that you could push up or down to make the more or less flexible. (Wearever made a cheap copy of that nib.)

They have a Whal-Eversharp subsection here..........go there. All I know is what I told you, and that in the '30's Eversharp made superflex nibs and in the '40's semi-flex.

There are some very pretty Art Deco pens by them designed by a man who designed the fastest train in the world.

 

Some men collect antique single malt scotch, antique cars or antique pens.................I do think you have no need to envy your friends collection of antique mistresses.

The Reality Show is a riveting result of 23% being illiterate, and 60% reading at a 6th grade or lower level.

      Banker's bonuses caused all the inch problems, Metric cures.

Ransom Bucket cost me many of my pictures taken by a poor camera that was finally tossed. Luckily, the Chicken Scratch pictures also vanished.

The cheapest lessons are from those who learned expensive lessons. Ignorance is best for learning expensive lessons.

 

 

 

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Eduardo,

I've got my eye on a very interesting Parker ringtop...it's got a square ring I've never seen on any pen before, and the seller says it's flexy....why am I telling you?!!

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One vendor that sells good flex pens for cheap that are well tuned is Greg Minuskin. Dude's an (bleep). But his prices are good and his pens are too, but if he makes a mistake (admittedly quite rare, his work is so good that I'm still recommending him,) and you ask him to... provide basic customer service... he will throw a tantrum like a baby about it.

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've had better experiences with him, perhaps, but I try to use my Downton manners with nibmeisters.

 

In fact, I bought a very nice Waterman ringtop from him a couple of weeks ago.

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Great thread, vintage flexible nibs are really great fun to use, agree with much thats been already mentioned, for my its just as nice to have a great nib than any particular brand. There are great warranted nibs out there. As Ive been accumulating some there are some basic principles that have come across. The tipping on really early pens is more likely to be poor, but mine after early 20s have been pretty good. Alco, Waterman, ingersoll, Carters and many other brands reliably produced quality nibs. You can find one. Ive bought a couple from 5 star pens too, they inspect them pretty well. I must add though that when I started out I was less careful than now to avoid stressing a nib, even though I can repair it. Also as have tried to improve my writing I find that really broad variation is not always better, the ones I keep coming back to have finer hairlines and predictable amount of variation....fun

Regards, Glen

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I acquired some very flexible nibs very inexpensively on eBay. I look for the listings that show that the nib is okay and has long, thin tines and a body and/or cap that might need some repair but that the imperfections will not effect how well the pen writes. I always send a message to the seller asking if the tines spread apart with very gentle pressure on the page. Some have no idea what I am talking about, others answer back that the tines do spread with minimal pressure. As long as the pen works, the tines spread and the price is right, I buy the pen. Of the many pens I have bought this way I have only had one that was not anywhere near flexible as claimed. For me, the hunt for the perfect nib was half the fun of the process. Best of luck in your quest for your first vintage flexible nibbed pen!

 

ETA: I got my first flexible nibbed pen from a seller here on FPN for $50. It is a medium flex nib and writes beautifully, but the clip is missing and the body has discolored into a funky purple pattern. It is a Waterman 3V with a #2 Waterman nib. I call is a "user" pen, no longer complete or beautiful, but writes like a dream and has plenty of flex.

Edited by Sinistral1

Breathe. Take one step at a time. Don't sweat the small stuff. You're not getting older, you are only moving through time. Be calm and positive.

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Check the vintage French made and UK made Parker, they are awesome. Here are mine

35164585320_f6e1db27f4_z.jpg

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35551248855_f5461c17ca_z.jpg

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34710308054_fa9ec6e3c0_z.jpg

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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  On 3/31/2019 at 12:06 PM, georges zaslavsky said:

Check the vintage French made and UK made Parker, they are awesome. Here are mine

35164585320_f6e1db27f4_z.jpg

35164584950_93f06a1a1e_z.jpg

35551248855_f5461c17ca_z.jpg

35551248025_69810045aa_z.jpg

35421142761_02d9c50cfa_z.jpg

34710308464_b1994312c2_z.jpg

34710308054_fa9ec6e3c0_z.jpg

 

what beautiful fountain pens you have in your collection :thumbup:

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Well after having practiced with the dip pens I think that flexibility is not my thing -_-
I think I have a heavy hand because when I wrote I made pools of ink and even using my minimum pressure, I saw quite a lot of feathering and bleeding even in my highest quality papers.
I did the right thing to have tried with the dip pens because in this way I realized that flexibility is not my thing, flexibility looks fantastic in the right hands that have that skill and patience but in my case I do not have that ability and I think that above all patience my writing tends to be quite fast which is the opposite of the flexibility that is a more meditative art.

 

Thank you all for having supported me by giving me your experience in this forum, but I will still continue with my vintage fountain pen hunt, at this moment I am still looking for a vintage fountain pen made of ebonite but now I will look for it without flexibility. I will leave it to those who They can get their full potential. B)
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There are some Indian pens offered with flexible steel nibs--you can always get one of those on a budget. They require more pressure than dip nibs, and the tines don't spread that far, but they are easier to work with in terms of constant ink supply--and good for a heavier hand.

  On 3/31/2019 at 3:12 PM, the-smell-of-dust-after-rain said:

“I admit it, I'm surprised that fountain pens are a hobby. ... it's a bit like stumbling into a fork convention - when you've used a fork all your life.” 

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  On 4/8/2019 at 12:02 AM, Edo98 said:

 

Well after having practiced with the dip pens I think that flexibility is not my thing -_-
I think I have a heavy hand because when I wrote I made pools of ink and even using my minimum pressure, I saw quite a lot of feathering and bleeding even in my highest quality papers.
I did the right thing to have tried with the dip pens because in this way I realized that flexibility is not my thing, flexibility looks fantastic in the right hands that have that skill and patience but in my case I do not have that ability and I think that above all patience my writing tends to be quite fast which is the opposite of the flexibility that is a more meditative art.

 

Thank you all for having supported me by giving me your experience in this forum, but I will still continue with my vintage fountain pen hunt, at this moment I am still looking for a vintage fountain pen made of ebonite but now I will look for it without flexibility. I will leave it to those who They can get their full potential. B)

 

 

Hi,

 

that's completely fine. And important.

Maybe vintage stub nibs will be yours...

Most are broad, few are F, but medium stubs give nice line variation when writing quickly, too.

 

Best

Jens

Edited by SchaumburgSwan

.....................................................................................................

https://www.flickr.com/photos/136145166@N02/albums

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  On 3/26/2019 at 5:51 PM, sidthecat said:

I've had better experiences with him, perhaps, but I try to use my Downton manners with nibmeisters.

 

In fact, I bought a very nice Waterman ringtop from him a couple of weeks ago.

 

Like I said, his work is so good that I still recommend him, despite him being a giant ass.

 

He's saved a parker flex nib that nobody else would even touch, that had cracked both sides of the breather hole. His skill with a laser welder is beyond question.

 

But, he also ruined a waterman ringtop accidentally, sending it to me inked, so it leaked and ruined the cardinal red ebonite. It also had an old sac that he didn't replace and split a few days later. When I asked him to take responsibility and return the pen, he threw the weirdest freaking tantrum and threatened me with his lawyer.

 

He's not a nice man. His work just BARELY exceeds the frustration of dealing with him.

 

Edo, dip nibs are NOT representative of normal writing. When people say to try them, they're telling you to practice your calligraphy with them. Dip nibs are not going to do a good job with everyday writing (they actually made dip nibs that were stiffer for this purpose, and many of them were still what we'd call a wet noodle in the fountain pen world) and they're not representative of how you'd handle a flex nib pen in day to day writing. Some absolute wet noodle hyperflex pens are too much to handle in everyday writing, yes. But 95% of them are not that. A brause rose or even a zebra G are going to be dramatically softer than the vast majority of flex nibs.

 

if you have $50, I'll sell you a nice full flex 14k #1 eversharp nib mounted nicely in a noodlers nib creaper. It's a medium, very soft, giving 3x tine spread with very little pressure. It also writes just a nice bouncy medium line when you're not asking it to throw shades. The nib is new old stock, the pen it came from split the second I inked it, so it writes just as the factory meant it to, no worn spots or anything. I put it in a creaper, tuned it, and put it away since mediums aren't my thing, but it's begging for a flex newbie to have some fun with it. It doesn't mush down into a BB when you're just trying to write down a grocery list, but when you want, it will add some big bold flare. If you're interested, PM me and I'll send you some pictures and a video of it in action.

 

Also, practice. We all sucked out loud when we started with flex nibs. They take some practice. I record videos of my handwriting with various pens and upload them to youtube, and my video a year ago of a boston safety with a waterman flex nib is almost embarassing compared to my handwriting now.

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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Edo, one has to remove the oil coating of a dip pen, by licking it, or touching a match to it for a second or so.....toothbrush also works from my reading.

With the protective coating removed, you should have a different experience than a blob machine. There are thicker dip pen inks, Higgans, Windsor&Newton.

 

Must admit I do very little scribbling with my dip pen nibs....I'd have to learn to write if I messed with them to any extent. (Sigh cubed, even have unused oblique nib holders.)

The Reality Show is a riveting result of 23% being illiterate, and 60% reading at a 6th grade or lower level.

      Banker's bonuses caused all the inch problems, Metric cures.

Ransom Bucket cost me many of my pictures taken by a poor camera that was finally tossed. Luckily, the Chicken Scratch pictures also vanished.

The cheapest lessons are from those who learned expensive lessons. Ignorance is best for learning expensive lessons.

 

 

 

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      @lamarax That's what I used! (In reply to black coffee).. But the milk might not be good at all for paper.
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      Cappuccino should work. Frothy milk also helps to lubricate the nib. But it has to be made by a barista.
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      Try black coffee. No sugar.
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      Coffee is too light to write with though I've tried.
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      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 Today 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
    • 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.
    • Eppie_Matts 23 June 19:25
      Thanks! I've just ordered some #6's to experiment with.
    • Al-fresco 21 June 12:11
      @Eppie_Matts Shouldn't be a problem - I've just put a Bock #6 Titanium into a La Grande Bellezza section. Went straight in without any problem.
    • Curiousone11 21 June 4:35
      Any recommendations on anyone who specializes in original pen patents?
    • Eppie_Matts 20 June 1:32
      Hi all - I'm new to experimenting with pens and nibs. Can I put a bock 6 on a Pineider? Thanks!
    • penned in 16 June 17:33
      Hi, I'm new to this forum and was wondering where is the best place to sell a Montblanc ballpoint pen? Are ballpoints allowed here? It's a beautiful pen that deserves a great listing. Thanks.
    • ChrisUrbane 9 June 3:16
      I havent logged in here for a while. I have moved and when I try to change my location on my profile, when I go to save it, it sais 'page not found' and that I do not have authority to change that.
    • Dlj 6 June 20:19
      I am looking for someone who can repair a Waterman Preface ballpoint that won’t stay together
    • Penguincollector 30 May 14:59
      I just noticed that the oppsing team of the game I watched last night had a player named Biro in their lineup. He must be part of Marsell the oily magician’s cadre
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