fountainpens

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pushka, in [Meta] Now taking submissions for a new banner image
@pushka@beehaw.org avatar
hsl,
@hsl@wayfarershaven.eu avatar

I missed this comment - sorry about that! That is absolutely gorgeous! <3

mhmmm, in Disappointing inks

For me, that was Noodler’s Black Swan in Australian Roses. It looked so cool and full of shading in the swatches I looked at - especially when it got dark, nearly black where it pooled.

Maybe I got another, worse batch of it or something, but for me it’s just a really uniform magenta, even on TR and wet pens. I don’t get what the hype is about, but maybe I was just unlucky.

Funnily, for me, skull and roses sheens red pretty heavily on nearly all papers. Maybe you got a bad batch, as well?

notlookingfornemo, in Wing Sung 601 "Flighter"

I give this pen a hearty +1. I have owned, sold, and given away a lot of 30$USD and below pens in the last decade. The 601 and Lamy Safari (and technically a brass Kaweco Sport if that counts) are the only pens in this budget I have kept. The 601 is my off the beaten path recommendation beside the usual suspects of beginner pens. The pen’s capacity in a very pleasant body is the big selling point for me. The filling system is neat, and the use of a O-ring type piston (is that the technical term?) like the one found in a piston filler over the latex used in the original 601 model is an excellent upgrade in my opinion. For people who throw around their pens, the plastic isn’t the toughest thing in the world, but I think your metal version solves that problem.

The hooded nib is great for slowing dry out too!

My question to you is how the balance on the metal version, especially when posted? The plastic grip worries me a little.

coys25,

The balance is great - I almost always post and have had no problems. I think that its because the pen itself has a small profile, so while the steel adds some weight, it’s still not a very heavy or big pen overall.

UnfortunateTwist, in Orange ink recommendations

https://mountainofink.com/blog/orange-ink

My favorite resource for comparing different shades of a color! Hopefully you can narrow down what you’re looking for.

ItsJason, in Good journals/planners for fountain pens?

My favorite notebook is the JetPens Kanso Noto. They have 160 sheets (320 pages) of Tomoe River paper with a 5mm dot grid. Tomoe River paper is a premium fountain pen friendly paper that should solve your feathering problems.

www.jetpens.com/…/29704

JetPens offers free shipping in the US for order of $35 or more. I don’t know what options are available outside of the US.

The notebook is currently out of stock. I expect more to be back soon. Tomoe River paper was sold from one paper company to another. I think JetPens just cleared out their stock with paper from the original company and I anticipate they’ll bring the notebook back soon with paper from the new company (Sanzen). In the past, the notebooks sold for $19.50, which is a great price for a premium paper notebook (seriously, I think only the Nanami Seven Seas notebooks have a better price per page for premium paper) . However, to keep the price low, the notebook doesn’t have bells and whistles like an elastic closure or page marker ribbons.

Bozicus, in Good journals/planners for fountain pens?

I’ve gotten good mileage out of Rhodia and Claire Fontaine, and my sibling swears by Tomoe River. Do not try Moleskine, I have gotten more feathering on those notebooks than on any paper I have ever used. I think they’re designed for pencils, or something.

Fair disclosure, though, I usually just use cheap composition books, and find a pen/ink combo that looks good on whatever I happen to be using. I only use nice paper if I particularly need it for a given pen or ink, or if I am going to show someone else what I’ve written.

marshadow, in Good journals/planners for fountain pens?

I like my Hobonichi Techo planner. The paper is thin, so it ghosts a bit, but it doesn’t bleed. I think they also make plain journals, and it’s not uncommon for Hobonichi fans to buy an extra planner to use as a journal.

Shihali, in Good journals/planners for fountain pens?

Hobonichi Techo is always good, but more oriented towards keeping a diary and a little expensive (though you get what you pay for).

XanderBrendon, in Recommendations for a teal ink?

I’m a fan of Colorverse Gravity Wave

Maerman, in Not New Pen day, but Favorite Pen Day?

Be honest. Did you write the Shavian just hoping someone would remark on it? Like I just did?

Valdair, in Favorite autumn inks?

Diamine Autumn Oak, Montblanc Corn Poppy Red, Montblanc Golden Yellow. I'm not sure which if any of these are still being made though, probably not the yellow.

spinne, in Favorite autumn inks?
@spinne@sh.itjust.works avatar

Diamine Honey Burst and Robert Oster Red Orange are the perfect colors for autumn leaves :)

coys25,

The Diamine guitar inks just generally look like nice autumn inks - nice!

xoagray, in Letter writing paper recommendations?
@xoagray@pawb.social avatar

It seems like the only company I can reliably find lined paper from is Rhodia. That said their paper is very good, and though it comes in tablets, the pages tear out easily and cleanly so you can pull them out and use them as loose leaf. I’m really surprised how difficult it is to find lined paper from companies like Tomoe River, Clair Fontaine, etc over here where I am. (SE US.) I have to basically import everything, so I’m at the whims of what I can get from places like Goulet, Jet Pens, and Amazon.

moosemoosemoose,

Oh that’s a good idea. Rhodia is pretty cheap around here. I completely forgot it comes in anything but dot grid! Something new to add to my cart, thanks.

kentucky444, in What paper is everyone else using?
@kentucky444@lemmy.world avatar

In no particular order.

  • Oxford Optik Paper 90gsm - it does wonders for me because here it is cheap, widely available at any stationery-related shop and comes in a variety of formats (spiral, bound, loose-leaf, planners, etc). The value/price in the Euro zone is unmatched IMHO.
  • Clairefontaine A5 bound notebooks, specifically the My Essential line — designed to answer Leuchtturm bullet journal offers. While a little bit pricey, to me it still beats Leuchtturm1917 in the value/price ratio. They’re priced similarly, but the Clairefontaine just offers a better experience with FPs than L1917.
  • I specifically try to use Navigator 80gsm when I print something and then intend on taking notes with my FPs. Cheap, widely available and a really good value/price ratio.
MrFunnyMoustache, in Comparison of A-, B-, and C-series paper sizes

When I was a student, all my notebooks were either A4 or B5, these days even A5 is too big for me and I end up with A6 for most of my handwriting stuff.

Never seen a C-series paper though, didn’t even know it existed.

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