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Thread: Fountain Pens?
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11-09-2010, 08:15 AM #1
Wow... fountain pens.
First question -- what was the one you tried and liked?
My favorite are the Pelikan, Pilot, Sailor and Namiki.
The Parker Sonnet has a fine nib and is well considered.
The Pilot vanishing point is a prize!
Add this site to your web search.
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Most have piston converters so the sky is the limit for the
choice of inks.
A fun pen is the big Lamy Safari especially for the price.
A good pen deserves good paper.
And you thought PAD was paper.
Do not ignore pen nibs for the old
dip pen if you have a desk.
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11-09-2010, 08:36 AM #2
- Join Date
- Sep 2010
- Posts
- 18
Thanked: 2Well, I'm quite new to them myself, but I've found this forum exeedingly helpful.
http://fountainpennetwork.com/
They've convinced me to go for the Lamy Safari. I like the look and I want an italic nib.
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11-09-2010, 11:17 AM #3
- Join Date
- Oct 2010
- Posts
- 123
Thanked: 18Hi Basil.
The FPN (see the post above this one) is the best place to get information about fountain pens. You may find me as a member there named...'Shangas'...same as here. There's thousands (literally) of very helpful and knowledgeable members there who'll be able to help you. I'm certainly gonna try and be one of them.
For $100 there's plenty of good, entry-level fountain pens that you can buy which you should be able to buy a seperate piston-converter for, at very little extra cost. Brands such as LAMY, Parker, Sheaffer and Waterman all sell cheap, good-quality converter-filler fountain pens.
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The Following User Says Thank You to Shangas For This Useful Post:
niftyshaving (11-13-2010)
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11-09-2010, 12:57 PM #4
The Parker '51' is probably the best pen for long term use. They are light, write well and hold a lot of ink.
A lot of the modern pens are too heavy and built more for show and signing your name, rather than writing several pages of script.'Living the dream, one nightmare at a time'
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The Following User Says Thank You to welshwizard For This Useful Post:
niftyshaving (11-13-2010)
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11-09-2010, 01:08 PM #5
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11-09-2010, 04:06 PM #6
Went to a store today and tried out a few pens.
Most were out of my price range but I bought a Lamy Studio pen with a medium nib. It flowed nice and it came with a converter so I can use bottled ink.
Now my next question I which ink can I use that won't flow too wet. I do a lot of writing in moleskine notebooks and I don't want it to bleed through.Shaving_story on Instagram
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11-11-2010, 10:13 AM #7
I have two Pilots, one vanishing point and one Custom 74. So far I have been very pleased with them.
I use the Vanishing Point as my outside the house pen and the Custom 74 stay at home. With the VP's plunger style oporation it's easy to deal with on the move. While the Custom 74 and it screw top cover makes it a pain when out and about.
I use Noodlers inks most of the time, Walnut being my favorite. But have about a dozen inks at my desk...
I got into fountain pens the same way I got interested in straights, less junk going into the landfill, reusing the same pen for 4 years now and haven't had to buy new ones in all that timeLast edited by DwarvenChef; 11-11-2010 at 10:18 AM.
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11-11-2010, 09:33 PM #8
- Join Date
- Feb 2009
- Location
- Asheville, NC
- Posts
- 71
Thanked: 10I just picked up a Faber Castell Ambition medium nib in black about 2 weeks ago, along with a plunger converter and some Private Reserve Ink in Fast Dry American Blue (fast dry because I'm a lefty).
Really happy to spend <$85 for everything and have a pen that seems like it's built like a tank. We also have an excellent Pen/ink/stationary store here in Asheville.
They had some $4k pens that the owner let me test drive. Pretty sweet.
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11-11-2010, 10:06 PM #9
I bought a Pelikan M800 recently, in black with a fine nib, it's a stunning piece of kit. A bit above your price range but IMO it's just about perfect.
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01-26-2011, 03:36 PM #10
hey,
I have a nice Lamy pen. It is filled with a screw pump (which is what I believe you refer to as a piston) so there are no disposable cartridges).
I use it every day at work and it's never let me down! I'd highly recommend it.
Stultsy