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Diamine Golden Honey (150th Anniversary II)


namrehsnoom

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Diamine Golden Honey (150th Anniversary II)

 

The ink maker from Liverpool is one of the staple brands in ink-land. They consistently produce solid inks for a very reasonable price. In 2017, Diamine released the second ink series to commemorate their 150th Anniversary. I obtained my set shortly thereafter, but more or less forgot about them when my attention drifted to Japanese inks. About time to do the reviews. Fortunately, these anniversary inks are still easily obtainable, so if you like what you see you can still get them.

 

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Golden Honey has a name that fits the colour: a really nice yellow-orange that looks great on paper. Beware that you need to choose your pens/nibs wisely: the ink’s lubrication is fairly bad in dry writers with finer nibs. But that’s easily solved using a wet pen or a broader nib – in my case, the ink is a perfect match for my Pelikan M600 Vibrant Orange with F-nib. Shading becomes really prominent in M-nibs and above, but with really broad stubs it’s a bit too much for me. For me, the ink works best with M-B-1.1 nibs, where it presents its best side.

 

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The ink writes nicely wet (but beware of that lubrication issue in fine-nibbed dry pens), and leaves a well-saturated line, even with the EF nib. The colour is definitely an orange, but leaning to yellow in low-saturated parts. Colourwise, it’s almost an exact match for Papier Plume Sazerac, but in a one-on-one fight this Diamine Golden Honey turns out to be the better ink. The ink works well with both white and cream paper, but the white papers do enhance the looks of the ink’s beautiful shading. With low-quality paper, there’s a tiny bit of feathering and you can expect a fair amount of show-through and bleed-through.

 

To illustrate the colour span of Golden Honey, I did a swab on 52 gsm Tomoe River paper, where I really saturated portions of the paper with ink. Golden Honey has a broad dynamic range, evolving from a wispy almost yellow to a nicely saturated orange. This translates to strong shading when writing, but because the contrast between light and dark parts is nicely balanced, the shading never becomes too harsh. Nice!

 

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On the smudge test – rubbing text with a moist Q-tip cotton swab – the ink showed some – mostly yellow – smearing, but the text itself remains crips and clear. Water resistance is totally absent – some residue is left on the page, and with some detective work you might be able to reconstruct your writing (but don’t depend on it). Looking at the bottom part of the chromatography, I had expected better water resistance - but no.

 

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I’ve tested the ink on a wide variety of paper – from crappy Moleskine to high-end Tomoe River. On each scrap of paper I show you:

  • An ink swab, made with a cotton Q-tip
  • 1-2-3 pass swab, to show increasing saturation
  • An ink scribble made with a Lamy Safari M-nib fountain pen
  • The name of the paper used, written with a Lamy Safari B-nib
  • A small text sample, written with the Lamy Safari M-nib
  • Source of the quote, written with an F-nib Pelikan M600
  • Drying times of the ink on the paper (with the M-nib Safari)

The multi-paper writing test shows that Golden Honey handles most papers well, looking good on both white and cream paper. There is a small amount of feathering on low-quality paper, but nothing really extreme. With cheap paper, you do get a lot of see-through and some bleed-through, making it nigh impossible to use the backside of the paper. Drying times were about 5 seconds on absorbent paper, and about 15 seconds on most other papers (with my M-nib Lamy Safari).

 

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Because scans don't always capture an ink's colour and contrast with good precision, I also add a photo to give you an alternative look on this Diamine ink. To my eye, both scan and photo capture the colour well, but the scans definitely exaggerate the shading (too much contrast between the light and dark parts). 

 

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Writing with different nib sizes
The picture below shows the effect of nib sizes on the writing (written on Rhodia N°16 80 gsm paper). All samples were written with a Lamy Safari. I also added a couple of visiting pens: a Pelikan M600 with F-nib, and an Esterbrook Estie with Journaler nib. Golden Honey looks definitely better in the wetter-writing visiting pens. My Pelikan M600 Vibrant Orange with F-nib captures its sweet spot: nicely saturated and just the right amount of shading. 

 

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Related inks
To compare Diamine Golden Honey with related inks, I use my nine-grid format with the currently reviewed ink at the center. This format shows the name of related inks, a saturation sample, a 1-2-3 swab and a water resistance test – all in a very compact format. Papier Plume Sazerac is almost identical, and Super 5 Delhi Orange comes close (and has the advantage of being waterproof).

 

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Inkxperiment – The Doors of Eden
As a personal challenge, I try to create interesting drawings using only the ink I’m reviewing. I find this to be a fun extension of the hobby, and these single-ink drawings are great for exploring the colour-range nuances that are present in the ink. I love doing them! 


Inspiration for this drawing comes from Adrian Tchaikovsky’s “The Doors of Eden” – an SF masterpiece that explores the concept of parallel Earths. In each world, evolution took a slightly different path, with species other than homo sapiens coming out as top predator. And now these worlds are touching and merging… which shouldn’t happen and threatens the fabric of existence. 

 

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I started with an A4 piece of watercolour paper that I divided in panels representing the parallel worlds. Each section gets a mini drawing, identical in theme but slightly different – referring to the diverging paths evolution took on these worlds. Our own Earth gets slightly bigger panes. The painting builds up from heavily water-diluted Golden Honey, and then adds layers with more and more ink added to the mix. Final details were made with a fountain pen and pure Golden Honey. The resulting drawing shows the broad range of tones that can be extracted from this Diamine ink – simply great! You might also notice that on the absorbent watercolour paper, the colour in the panels gets a fairly one-dimensional, almost cartoony look. Overall, I really like this Golden Honey for this artsy type of activity.

 

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Inkxpired – computational art
I love experimenting with pen/ink/paper, and have added another layer as part of the hobby. I’m exploring computational art, inspired by the ink drawings I do during ink reviews. Another fun offshoot of the hobby… and all that starting with a few drops of dye-coloured water on paper.

 

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Starting from the original “The Doors of Eden” drawing, I first converted it to a black-and-white picture with exaggerated contrast. I then applied an “old photo” filter, and added a sepia-toned gradient to the result. Finally, I used a “pixel sort” filter to blur the boundaries between the different worlds. 

 

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Conclusion
Diamine Golden Honey is a lovely-looking yellow-orange, that I can recommend for both writing and painting. A happy colour, that is the perfect match for my Pelikan M600 Vibrant Orange with F-nib. Just be aware that it doesn’t like dry writers, and you’ll be good. If you enjoy orange inks, this one is most certainly a must-have.


Technical test results on Rhodia N° 16 notepad paper, written with Lamy Safari, M-nib

 

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Backside of writing samples on different paper types

 

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Thank you, @namrehsnoom!  Great review, as always.  I'm not sure about the color - I might like it, I might find it too pale...  Would have to try it in one of my wetter pens.  Most of all, though, I like that artwork!  And the two versions give completely different feels, with the computational version creating much more discomfort - the threat is real in that one! :)

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Everything about this review is simply wonderful. I love the ink, I (always) love the review format, and I love the artwork.

 

Thank you.

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Thank you, @namrehsnoom for your comprehensive ink review and for the artwork - it's always a pleasure to read and look. :thumbup:

 

I was never in love with orange inks - until I discovered Kaweco Sunrise Orange and Pelikan Mandarin. In comparison (thank you for putting them side-by-side) the Diamine ink looks a bit muted and pale. So I will stay with my other two oranges. :)

One life!

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