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Thread: Fountain Pens?
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01-09-2011, 01:53 PM #81
I write with a St. Dupont Fidelio, used it a couple of years now, I`m very satisfied with the pen.
The fountain pen of my dreams are a Mt. Blanc Meisterstuck
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01-12-2011, 01:00 PM #82
Nice
So many pens out there that I have never seen But I have had my head pretty much stuck on the Japanese pens.
I just picked up a UK Parker Lady with a wet M nib. Just after writing a while I find it's just way to small for me, so it's going to have to find a new home
Last edited by DwarvenChef; 01-12-2011 at 01:03 PM.
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01-14-2011, 02:13 AM #83
Pen, paper, envelope and stamp.
Grand Parents, Mom's Dad's and lovers love them.
In todays world print a picture from your digital camera
with a sheet of paper that is too big then take pen
to the paper and add a bit about the picture. My
Mom suffered from Alzheimer's and she got to enjoy them
many many more times when compared to a phone call.
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01-23-2011, 02:43 AM #84
The Tortoise pen on the right can be had from Richard Binder for not much more than a hundred; mine has an 18k italics nib (ground yesterday at the Philadelphia Pen show by Richard Binder) and for that reason cost more. Its called the Belmont and is manufactured by Howard Levy of the famed Bexley pen co.
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01-25-2011, 08:12 PM #85
So in my new found fountain pen fondness I signed up for Gouletpens.com ink drop club where I get 5 little vials of different inks to sample each month. I emptied two of them already and thought I could put the empty vials to good use here on the SRP forum.
Here's the deal: I'll send you one vial of an ink I have you'd like to try, along with an empty vial for you to send me a sample of ink you think I should try.
Here are the inks I have bottles of: Diamine Ox Blood, Noodler's Air Corp Blue Black, Nakahama Manjiro, Black Swan in Australian Roses, El Lawrence, Burma Road Brown, Heart of Darkness.
I only have two vials right now so only enough for one trade but I'll get more as time goes on. Perhaps this can grow into a nice ink trading for the fountain pen heads around here.
Also, having bought a few cheap Jinhao pens I can recommend them as cheap beginner pens for someone interested in trying them out, but they are cheap and perform as such. I guess they're like the infamous Gold Dollar razors: good enough to get the idea of straight shaving in most cases but ultimately you can find better values elsewhere. The Lamy and Noodler's pens are much better tools overal. Just my 2 nibs.
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01-25-2011, 11:27 PM #86
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01-25-2011, 11:34 PM #87
Bass guy,
I would do a mini ink swap with you. Maybe you would like to try some Iroshizuku? I have Yama Budo (Wild Grapes Burgundy) and KonPeki (deep ocean blue). I also have some Noodlers, Waterman, Aurora and Private Reserve. Anything sound good?
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The Following User Says Thank You to Bill S For This Useful Post:
bassguy (01-26-2011)
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01-26-2011, 12:11 AM #88
KonPeki sounds nice. I tend not to like blues, or at least haven't found one I like yet. Kind of the way I am with Sheffield :P but I'm always willing to try one!
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01-26-2011, 01:39 AM #89
Did I just doom myself?
I got a wild hair today and bought my first FP. I just picked up a new Nakimi/Pilot VP with a fine nib...
I'm already itching to see what kind of inks I should look at. Any good suggestions of what a newbie should experience?
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01-26-2011, 01:43 AM #90
I just saw this thread and thought I would contirbute a picture i took yesterday.
This is one of my pen trays..
1) Modern Montblanc 149 with Binderized Cursive Italic 0.7mm Nib
2) Early 1960s Montblanc 149
3) 75th Anniversary Montblanc 146
4) 100th Anniversary Historical Montblanc
5) Montblanc 144 with Binderized Cursive Italic 0.7mm Nib
6) Thomas Mann Writers Edition Montblanc (2009)
7) Mark Twain Writers Edition Montblanc (2010)
8) Visconti Homo Sapiens
9) Edison Pearl with bulb filler
10) Waterman unknown model with 0.7mm Cursive Italic nib ground by Brian Gray from Edison Pens.
11) Pilot Vanishing Point with Brian Gray Cursive Italic 0.7mm Nib
12) 1940's Vacumatic Parker 51 M nib.