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What pen(s) are you using today?


A Smug Dill

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I am currently using a Sailor 1911L ground to a .5mm cursive Italic.  It is filled with Iroshizuku Yama Guri.  I have been using Iroshizuku inks quite a bit lately.

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Pen(s) in Rotation:

Majohn A2 (Fine) - Montblanc Irish Green

Parker "51" Aerometric (Broad, England) - Waterman Black

Lamy 2000 Ballpoint - Lamy Black Medium Refill

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1 hour ago, PAKMAN said:

Asvine V169

 

Resisting, Resisting, Resisting..................😁

Which ink are you using?

 LINK <-- my Ink and Paper tests

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2 hours ago, USG said:

 

Resisting, Resisting, Resisting..................😁

Which ink are you using?

I stopped resisting when I saw the color and metal trim I wanted on AliExpress for under $25. It’s a stocking stuffer (or will be, I’ve been wrapping up packages as they show up without opening them). 
 

Today’s pen is a Five below blue demonstrator 1.1 stub with a Waterman Serenity Blue long cartridge. Good little pen that adds some flair to my daily task list. 

Top 5 of 19 currently inked pens:

MontBlanc 144 IB, Herbin Orange Indien/ Wearingeul Frost

Sailor x Daimaru Central Rockhopper Penguin PGS mini, Sailor Wonder Blue

Parker 88 Place Vendôme IB, Diamine Golden Sands

Salz Peter Pan 18k gold filled filligree fine flex, Waterman Serenity Blue 

Pilot Silvern Dragon IB, Iroshizuku Kiri-Same

always looking for penguin fountain pens and stationery 

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large.266000339_AsvineP20regroundKaigeluNMFnibwritingsampleinLamyPacific.jpg.4f2dd7df67be5c3fa74ccd7ac0b513d9.jpg

 

I could have probably achieved more or less the same writing outcomes using a Sailor 14K gold M nib, without all the fuss and frustration.

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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7 hours ago, A Smug Dill said:

large.266000339_AsvineP20regroundKaigeluNMFnibwritingsampleinLamyPacific.jpg.4f2dd7df67be5c3fa74ccd7ac0b513d9.jpg

 

I could have probably achieved more or less the same writing outcomes using a Sailor 14K gold M nib, without all the fuss and frustration.

Thanks for the thorough (as always) demo.  What's an NMF? 

Festina lente

Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence

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22 hours ago, USG said:

 

Resisting, Resisting, Resisting..................😁

Which ink are you using?

Resistance if futile...

Ink in use :  Iroshizuku kon-peki blue

 

PAKMAN

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        My Favorite Pen Restorer                                            

 

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40 minutes ago, CrosshatchDave said:

My one and only Pilot Metropolitan with Lexington Grey ink.

So far.

Which color Metro?

As good as they are, spend $20 on a tune and they become fabulous. ;)

Festina lente

Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence

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I have two Metropolitans, one with a medium nib and one with a stub nib, and they both work great -- no tuning needed. 

Today, for me, it's been the Green Shadow Wave Parker Vacumatic, F nib, with Waterman Havana Brown, and the Pink Parker Vector, F nib, with Van Dieman Moonflower (a very nice, well behaved medium blue).

Ruth Morrisson aka inkstainedruth

"It's very nice, but frankly, when I signed that list for a P-51, what I had in mind was a fountain pen."

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12 hours ago, essayfaire said:

What's an NMF? 

 

NMF has how Sailor marks its Naginata Togi Medium Fine nibs. Kaigelu has adopted that designation for the type of nib it now produces that it likens to the Naginata Togi (sometimes errorneously referred to as ‘long knife’ by Chinese sellers and subsequently online shoppers), although I think the curvature of the tipping on the Kaigelu NMF nibs is closer to the Sailor Zoom nib.

 

Edited by A Smug Dill
grammar

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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4 hours ago, jandrew said:

FC 20 (mainly)

12-09-a.jpg.e5e82f5d094c7aee4e76bb686cff8426.jpg

 

Andrew, 

With your talents, have you ever thought about making your own Maki-e? 

I got 99 problems but a BIC ain't one! 

              ~◇◇◇◇~

Ever notice that all the instruments looking for signs of intelligent life in the universe are pointed away from Earth? 

                ~◇◇◇◇~

If I said I'll fix it, I will. There's no need to remind me every 6 months. 

 

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1 hour ago, A Smug Dill said:

 

NMF has how Sailor marks its Naginata Togi Medium Fine nibs. Kaigelu has adopted that designation for the type of nib it now produces that it likens to the Naginata Togi (sometimes errorneously referred to as ‘long knife’ by Chinese sellers and subsequently online shoppers), although I think the curvature of the tipping on the Kaigelu NMF nibs are closer to the Sailor Zoom nib.

 

Thank you; I actually have a Sailor with Zoom on the Christmas wish list. 

 

@inkstainedruthIt didn't need tuning, but once it was tuned it went from good workhorse to a pleasure to use!

Festina lente

Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence

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1 hour ago, Just J said:

 

Andrew, 

With your talents, have you ever thought about making your own Maki-e? 

Oh, thank you. But I wouldn't know where to even begin with Maki-e.

What have you done with the cat? It looks half dead.

 ~ Schrödinger's wife

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On 12/3/2022 at 12:46 AM, mizgeorge said:

Great example. Enough to make me want one a dem nibs.

I second @mizgeorge, @A Smug Dill. I should really install one of the NMFs, get going with it. (Waiting for the peak load of the work-season to pass.) 

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9 hours ago, jandrew said:

I wouldn't know where to even begin with Maki-e.

Trivial advice to a rhetorical question: Maybe with Lambrou's Fountain Pens of Japan (about 30 pages on the topic), then makers vids on YouTube 😄

 

In all seriousness, it would be great to have more people trying to make such pens. People who have talent for such work, who will later acquire the skills and help others get started.

 

I believe @MichalK  from Tamenuri Studio started this way. There is now one talented maker in the Netherlands, Anıl Gökçe, etc. 

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TL;DR: A 1960s Pilot Super, likely 200 or 250, with 14k gold nib with posting finish abd tipping, inked with Pilot Iroshizuku Take Sumi. 

 

This pen likes to draw!  Lovely nib, EF tracing and excellent feedback. To my surprise, reverse writing also works, and produces a thicker line, perhaps an FM even. 

 

large.20221210_130152.jpg.42663bb61d048e35326e54d8ba7e2cff.jpg

Figure 1. Nib thinking about drawing. 

 

large.20221210_125915.jpg.311116bc86169f5bb4d095a51fef1ad5.jpg

Figure 2. The pen rests. 

 

Enjoy your weekend! 

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5 hours ago, OldTravelingShoe said:

TL;DR: A 1960s Pilot Super, likely 200 or 250, with 14k gold nib with posting finish abd tipping, inked with Pilot Iroshizuku Take Sumi. 

 

This pen likes to draw!  Lovely nib, EF tracing and excellent feedback. To my surprise, reverse writing also works, and produces a thicker line, perhaps an FM even. 

 

large.20221210_130152.jpg.42663bb61d048e35326e54d8ba7e2cff.jpg

Figure 1. Nib thinking about drawing. 

 

large.20221210_125915.jpg.311116bc86169f5bb4d095a51fef1ad5.jpg

Figure 2. The pen rests. 

 

Enjoy your weekend! 

Perhaps they put the nib on backwards? Reverse writing is thicker?  

Festina lente

Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence

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1 hour ago, essayfaire said:

Perhaps they put the nib on backwards? Reverse writing is thicker?  

Hehe, I suspect it's because they shape the nib like a beak, turned slightly downward to create reinforcement to a needlepoint-like tip that does not wiggle. 

 

Conversely, the upper part of the beak, which one uses to write with the reverse of the nib, is the upper part of the beak, thus with a bit longer part in contact with the paper. It's a bit like the Sailor Naginata Concord, or the amazing, Kirk Speer-made, beak-like nib @jandrew likes to draw with.

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32 minutes ago, OldTravelingShoe said:

Conversely, the upper part of the beak, which one uses to write with the reverse of the nib, is the upper part of the beak, thus with a bit longer part in contact with the paper.

Ah, like changing the writing angle on a fude.

Festina lente

Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence

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