Originally Posted by
niftyshaving
"The way our grandfathers..."
The interesting way to do it is to pick up a pen nib holder and
a selection of steel dip pen nibs at an art store. Not the strange
ones like the fancy ball nibs but the classic bank and school nibs.
Perhaps an italic nib...
Add one good bottle of ink and a good pad of paper.
With a dip pen you can start with old timey india ink
or any fountain pen ink.
A pocket pen with cap that you can carry is also easy.
Today good steel nibs are on a par with gold (up to a point)
and are more durable. Lamy and others make good starter
pens. I mention them because most of the big Lamy pens
have big grips with shape that keeps the nib lined up. They
also write well.
The think with fountain pens is that they like a light touch
the same as a razor.
Another family is the Pilot pen family.
Pilot Varsity Disposable Fountain Pen are interesting.
I like the Pilot Vanishing Point retractable fountain pen
because the nib is very nice and inexpensive (even when
they are gold) to replace.
Another fine nib is the Pelikan: steel, gold plated steel
or gold. They are all good... Pelikan could be the best
signature pen out there.
There are hundreds of brands and models so beyond the
steel nib starter choices shop a lot.