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IT CAME!
The ink is not as dark as I expected,though that might be because the nib is extra fine; however, I may have to do a thorough cleaning.It may look dark in the photograph, but it looks purople in person. |
ohhh pretty snazzy. whats all the stuff it came with
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i'm super happy for you
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That's super cool. XD
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Pretty!
What's that blue ice-cream cone thing? |
That's a bulb syringe. I'm also quite fond of the pen.
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Very impressive! Reminds me of the days one had to trim one's quill by knife and sand the ink to dry it. :)
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I don't know much about fountain pens, but maybe the lighter colour to start is from the ink having to work it's way through the pen? Does it come empty?
Also, (if you don't mind my saying) your cursive looks a bit on the wobbly side. Do you write on a slant or straight up and down? |
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I write at a 45 degree angle, so slanted, but I was also trying to write with my shoulder as well... also, I was trying to write fast. |
Ah. Yeah, when I write fast the words tend to get smaller near the end and some letters go missing.
I tend to write at (if I had to guess) anywhere between 50 and 90 degrees, depending where my hand is comfortable that day. (I'm guessing that's right, assuming 90 degrees is writing on a fully horizontal piece of paper.) |
How one can write at a 90 degree angle on horizontal paper is beyond me. I can understand if the paper was on a vertical level, but horizontal, I can't fathom how the works.
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It means you're holding your forearm parallel to your body. It's not actually uncomfortable, but it can be a bit different in terms of the angle you're looking at the paper.
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Pretty much like that. In some cases I'm writing up a piece of paper, rather than across.
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You do calligraphy or? I've recently shown an interest in it so I'm going to purchase some tombow brush pens.
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Put your elbow on the table. Allow your forearm to rest on the table crossed in front of you. Now put a piece of paper underneath it so that your arm is right-side-up relative to it.
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Hey Boris, when you write, do you normally keep the piece of paper directly in front of you, in front of your non-writing hand, or in front of your writing hand? I find that when I keep a piece of paper in front of me, I write with the paper juuust slightly tilted, and if I keep it in front of my non-writing hand, I start twisting myself toward the paper and tilting the paper nearly 90 degrees from me, and if I put the paper in front of my writing-hand, the paper's pretty much vertical.
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Oh. I keep it in front of me while holding it with my none writing hand while my writing hand writes.
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I still think of having a pen and an inkwell when it comes to fountain pens. I don't really expect them to look modern. My dad had one in his office that I wasn't allowed to use (being all of about 4). The one time I tried, I made a grand mess of things. I've just got my Pilot V-pen thing now, but I find it writes too thick for most of my purposes, and the ink is heavy. I have a souvenir feather pen that I've yet to try and use. Came with a bottle of sepia ink. I think I should go find some black, since I'm not too fond of the sepia, though I suppose I could try some art. My sister did some art with a fountain pen and ink bottle, up until the ink dropped on her page and she had to madly work it before the ink set. No more bottle after that! |
Oh, I should have thought of that.
I see. Well, if you don't want to use bottled ink, then our only other options would be to purchase disposable fountain pens or see which pens use ink cartridges and which kinds. Some pens use universal cartridges, and others use their own brand cartridges, but you knew that already. I'd probably continue purchasing bottled ink, even if my bottle fell over. |
You mentioned that pen has a cartridge? Do you fill it from a bottle? My sister just kept dipping into it.
I love a good pen, but I'm also cheap. My last pen purchase was another Zebra Flight. Wonderful pens those! But they haven't yet released refills for them and people are annoyed. |
I did mention a cartridge, but you don't use a bottle to refill them. In fact, you don't refill them. Once the cartridge runs out of ink, you take out the cartridge and insert another one. Just be sure to clean our nib before inserting another cartridge if you are using a different coloured ink. This is a lamy safari cartridge.
Zebra flight? I do not recall hearing about those, but they do sound interesting. |
They are just ballpoints, but they write very smoothly and I like the lines. Zebra makes a number of refillable pens but the Flight is not one of them yet. They're are only about $1-3 I think, each, but I always like to avoid waste.
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Ah. I fancy roller pens and fountain pens, but ball point pens are great! I hope the flight pens get refills soon.
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Well...that's my learning for the day. I didn't know there was a distinction between ballpoint and rollerball pens.
Looking it up, the Zebra Z-Grip Flight is a ballpoint. I had a rollerball pen (Uni-Ball Vision) and loved it right up until I took it on a plane and the cabin pressure caused the ink to push out the pen nib and visibly drip on my paper. It's been bleeding slightly ever since. I do not advise taking any liquidy pen on a plane if you want to preserve it. |
Yeah, that's a risky business, and one I'm not willing to take with my fountain pen... want to purchase another pen... I wanna buy fountain pens for a bunch of people.
I currently have roller pens... my favourite one is the black ink one. |
I love having a good pen, but I can't afford to spend too much money on pens that I burn through regularly.
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That is incredibly beautiful! Does it take awhile to get used to, or have you used those types of pens before? Also, if one were interested in acquiring one what would you recommend? |
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I recommend cheap fountain pens so you don't waste a lot of money if you conclude you do not like writing with fountain pens, but I have heard that the following pens are good for those who are new to fountain pens.
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Thank you so much for your help! Now I know exactly what to wish for for the Holidays too. (We do secret Santa every year, 13 people is too many to buy for every year). Thank you also for your lovely list of ones to try first! When I acquire one I will let you know what I thought of them, that is if you do not mind. |
You're welcome, and I'm happy to have been able to help. Just so you know, do NOT use india ink or calligraphy/dip pen ink for your fountain pen.
You're welcome for the list too... those are just the ones I heard were recommended. I haven't purchased any of those except for the Lamy Safari, which I recommend.I would love to hear your thoughts and opinions about the fountain pen you acquire. |
That is a lot of spoiler tags.
But also a really neat fountain pen! I almost want to buy one now! |
In that case I believe I will try the Lamy Safari if I can locate it where I live. Is it online or do most art shoppes carry them would you think, like Artist Emporiums? Yeah, I only ever use Caligraphy ink really when I am using brushes, then again I use the ink stick you grind on the stone with water for that particular thing. |
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I don't really have the money for one currently. But maybe next year...or the year after...
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I see.
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Being broke kind of sucks.
But, once I get more of my debt under control and I work out an actual budget, I should be okay to actually buy stuff more. |
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