What I'd wished I'd known was that some pens are just hard starts and to avoid rubber grip pens - the latter especially can get icky after a few years!
I wish I'd been brave enough to try a broad nib when I started out. The gel pens and ballpoint pens that I use are both fine tipped (0.38mm usually), so I thought that EF would be best. Turns out, I really, really enjoy broad and stub nibs on my fountain pens. Biggest thing I wish I'd known when I started out was how much ink 80mL actually is!
For people who may have been gifted a vintage fountain pen from a family member or friend, I'd like to add the most MODERN fountain pens use cartridges and/or converters. Vintage fountain pens tend to have a lever-filling system where you lower the lever, dip the pen nib in the ink bottle, and then flip the lever up and wait a second or two. If your vintage fountain pen has been well-taken care of, then the interior "ink bladder" should still be intact. If you flip the lever down and hear a crunch, then your pen has NOT been taken care of, and the bladder has deteriorated to the point of needing replacement. If you're not confident about your ability to take care of that, then I recommend looking online for people who are. Extra Fun Fact about vintage fountain pen nibs: Vintage flex nibs tend to be more flexible than modern flex nibs. In fact, most- if not all -modern flex nibs are less flexible than vintage ones.
As a vintage pen collector, YES. But there's also other filling mechanisms like the Chilton, Touchdown, Vacumatic, aerometric, vintage Sheaffer's vac fillers, twist fillers, button fillers... On and on. 😉 (The wildly complex Sheaffer's Snorkel is a glorified touchdown at heart. Their earlier vac fillers are harder to restore.) And flex... Brian Goulet recently admitted that there's no true modern flex pens, compared to vintage. I have a 1912 Mabie Todd with crazy flex. I've accidentally flexed the nib to 45° and it sprang back. Try that with even a modern dip pen designed to be more flexible than any fountain pen today manages. You'll ruin it. Restoring a family member's vintage lever filler isn't that hard, just sometimes fiddley and takes patience to disassemble (sometimes the section is basically glued in. Time and gentle heat.😁) Then about 5 minutes to fit a new sac, wait for the shellac to dry from gluing the sac in place, bit of pure talc to let the sac slide in place, basically done, most instances. I personally did all of mine except for a Parker 51 Vacumatic (the tools needed ain't cheap.) With a razor blade, pair of fine tweezers. If I can still do them after a stroke...😁
@Paul Herman Yes! Thank you for the extra info! Especially with regards to the ink bladder replacement! I currently- and sadly -don't have any vintage fountain pens (except for one that's a double-sided pen and pencil combo with a gorgeous green-coloured marble-looking design) but I've definitely been looking for one that truly speaks to me while simultaneously being in working condition. I haven’t come across one, but I'm definitely hoping for one with a flex nib!
@@pixelsbykris5494 Combo ones are as easy as a basic lever filler. Pencil tends to still work, sac is just shorter because of the pencil part. And usually a budget pen, so a crap shoot if the section is pressure fit or glued (usually with shellac of some sort.) Like the dinky Peter Pan ones, basically cut the replacement sac in half (measure it. They don't hold a lot of ink already.) A good, satisfying DIY is a Parker 51 Aerometric. Sac ("Pli-glas") is PVC and almost indestructible. Generally just a good cleaning (time consuming as the collector, the equivalent of the fins on a modern feed, holds a TON of dried, old ink, usually), maybe a good polish, back in business. Just got to like a hooded nib and a VERY stiff nib. You want flex, before 1930 usually, and still hit or miss sometimes then. The Manifold nibs for writing on carbon copies seem to stem from the Lifetime nibs. VERY stiff. Waterman's, a Sheaffer's Junior that is close to softer than modern flex, Mabie Todd, Aiken Lambert, etc. I like pre WWI, myself, though those can be splotchy writers. A standard for flex is most Waterman's with their number 2 nibs. (The 12 is earlier and an eyedropper filler. The iconic 52 is lever. The 42 I think was a safety pen with a different mechanism than the Noodler's Boston Safety, which is a Moore design. Etc. Plus one of the "color" nibs from Waterman's. Maybe the Pink. I forget. 😁) Wahl-Eversharp even had some flex in the WWII era Skyline occasionally. And can't forget the gold nibbed budget pens. Usually a Warranted nib, which, because they were thin enough, tend to have nice flex regularly. Just either get one from a reputable seller or play roulette with eBay. Lots of sellers really don't know what they are selling. My Mabie Todd, a $200+ retail today was $60 because the antique store selling it just listed it as an old fountain pen. Sometimes you get lucky.😁😁 I highly recommend an Esterbrook to start down the rabbit hole of restoring your own. Well made, about 33 easily interchangeable nib units (I think they originated the concept) to suit almost anyone, very easy to restore. Sac size is a number 16, available on eBay, from Anderson Pens, or David Nishimura of Vintage Pens in Rhode Island. Or Pendragons in the UK. Tools needed are basic. Xacto knife or razor blade for scraping away dried shellac and cutting the sac to fit. Maybe slim, longer tweezers. Maybe dental picks for scraping away stuck dry ink sacs and maybe pulling the pressure bar. (Those are generally still good, but can rust.) Pair of spark plug boot pliers (same as section pliers for pen restoring, but 3x cheaper. Sac needed is determined by measuring where they slide on the section measure in inches, divided by 64. Or, the Pendragons website lists many pens and the sacs used. Wahl-Eversharp Skyline uses a 16, too, but a tapered one. Parker button fillers use one that is slimmer at the opening end. The dinky ones tend to have a number 10. There's plenty of sizes made. To the original formula. On the same original White Rubber molds. The same thickness and standard as the higher end pens used. You hear ink sacs tend to give out after about a decade. I have more than one that is still on the original sac for the last 70+ years. Proper maintenance seems to be the key. And avoid alkaline inks (a lot from Asia are alkaline.) Can dissolve the sac. I currently own over 40 Esterbrook pens, and have yet to pay much over $25 each. Patience, the vintage market can produce some great pens at budget prices. My 1940s Conway Stewart (when they still made the whole thing themselves, unlike today) was $35 plus a new sac, for example. Just picked up a truly budget ladies pink Arnold for $7, today. (I have a soft spot for vintage budget pens.) Early on, avoid steel nibs before WWII. Usually not stainless steel, except Esterbrook, so they can be pretty corroded where they contact the feed. Hope you are encouraged to try tackling one!
I find the argument that it's cheaper to use bottled ink a bit disingenuous. Once you start buying ink bottles, it's scientifically impossible to stop at just one. Eventually you amass a massive collection of barely used inks, each bottle costing 15-20 uniball jetstreams!
For a truly full fill with a twist converter or piston filler 1) stop turning the nob at around half full 2) take pen out of ink bottle and hold nib up 3) finish turning the nob the rest of the way drawing the ink in from the feed along with air 4) keeping the nib up turn the nob the other way to push the air out until you see ink coming from the nib or filler hole, you may see the odd bubble keep going until the ink stays. 5) insert pen back into the ink bottle and finish filling. After that you should have a complete fill with virtually no air in the chamber.
I began using fountain pens about a year ago since ordinary ballpoint pens always hurt my wrist after half an A4 page. I got a couple of Lamy Safari first since I initially considered a fountain pen primarily to be a tool. But it didn't take long before the Pokémon phrase, "Gotta Catch' Em All!" struck me. Today I have twenty-nine different Lamy Safari and two Kaweco Perkeo, and I'm not done collecting. I may have a problem. 😆 When it comes to paper, I only use either Oxford or Cambridge notebooks. They are cheap, have good paper and come in large pads, which is the best choice for me as I can write between 5-6 A4 pages daily.
Psa: if you are thinking you have to learn how to write differently with a fountain pen like I thought, don't worry! The only hard part for me was making sure I put the nib down at the right angle, but it didn't take me long to figure out. And you can use your normal writing style the same way as with gel pens. I have noticed though that my handwriting has changed some compared to when I take notes with a gel pen. Also, there are cheap (like walmart cheap) papers that work with fountain pens. They just have to be smooth. Mead 5 star isn't bad for an EF nib.
Anything from India or Vietnam tends to work. Pen+Gear you gotta check the origin. Made in the United States, like writing on Charmin... Caliber from CVS is the same. Depends on the origin.
Here in Mexico we have the worst paper in the world, but fortunately Kawai stores bring very good Chinese paper that is very fountain pen friendly, also other asian stores like Miniso offer very good notebooks at reasonable prices 😌
If you think you have bad handwriting and there is no point in buying one I would still tell you to get one, have Dysgraphia which makes writing a pain severely impeding my progress in school, my mother (profile picture) bought me a fountain pen which really helped improve my handwriting. My current theory is that it forces you to write slower, improving your handwriting.
It improved my caligraphy too. I used to put too much force in writing, and I developed a habit of tracing again over some letters. The fountain pen really helped me.
Re: comments about owning many bottles of fountain pen inks, if you don't like a color you've purchased or are worried it may have expired, please consider donating inks to your local art programs. Whether K-12, community college, or university, such supplies are highly valued. Or consider giving inks to local artists who will likely put them to good use -- expired inks can be used for far more than writing and drawing! 😊
Expired inks? Technically speaking nobody has proven a fountain pen ink expires, many people in forums like Reddit have reported very old inks still usable. I have several Sheaffer bottles from the 50s and 60s and they look good as new. The only one I could consider as an exception is a Washable Green that has a particularly strong smell but it's not mold, anyway, it has a dedicated pen just in case.
in germany you start to learn how to write with a fountain pen often in elementary school. most here have at least one fountain pen most with cartridges, so the thought that some are intimidated by using them seems strange to me
in other countries, fountain pen was considered a thing from the past, the majority of education use gel-ball point pens for fast note and writing and the price of a basic fountain pen is a bit more pricy than an average disposable gel pen were those things that gatekeep people from discovering these gems. But I glad that the fountain pen community is growing stronger.
I had initially used a fountain pen at school in the 70s. It wasn't required, but I preferred them. Then in the early 80s I discovered Parker Rollberball and never went back to fountain pens. Recently I had to find a cheap enough fountain pen option because my child's high school requires them to use fountain pens for some of their work. Very unusual these days. The majority use either ballpoint, because they're cheap, or otherwise some type of rollerball, probably a gel one. My wife has never used a fountain pen.
When i was in high-school i built a fountain pen kit and its what i used my senior year, but that was a decade ago. Recently i rediscovered it, and was trying to figure out how to resurrect it. After watching this and your video on cleaning them, and also a bit of alcohol, its back from the dead
When I refill my fountain pen (which uses a piston converter), I usually twist the piston as fast as I possibly can to get more ink into the converter. It works super well and lasts for a longer time.
As someone who still writes 90% of things by hand and in that Always with fountain pen where able, I'm glad to see I got it all right 😂😂 At my school we started out with pencil to learn the letters and then got our first fountain pen from school, we weren't allowed to write with ballpoint. And to me, this was bliss lol. I got some ballpoints don't get me wrong, but if I can use my fountainpens then i sure will
One more thing.... NEVER EVER DROP YOUR FOUNDATIN PEN! My heart sank when my Parker fountain pen rolled off the table and hit my marble floor nib first 💔💔
@@cinnamontoast4192same dude one time in my school it was break between two exams on the same day and some dude mustve been jealous of my fountain pen so he took one and slammed it agaisnt some surface and bent the nib horribly thankfully o could get it fixed
My heart broke when I dropped my beautiful Waterman fountain pen nib down. It was a special gift from my husband. The pen had to be shipped to France for repair but it was worth it…a very sentimental gift,
As a student i recommend keeping a normal pen and correction tape because, if you have an error while writing, the normal pen is for writing on the correction tape because if you use a fountain pen on correction tape it could cause the fountain pen to rip the correction tape
The other way I've learnt to encourage a cartridge pen to start is running it under water for a few seconds - sometimes it feels like the capillary action is stuck and needs some "encouragement" to move.
Please don't do that, you're just wasting water. You can get a very good result with just some drops of water through the breather hole of your nib or a chunk of wet cotton or tissue paper to moist the feeder. For very dried up ink or pens that haven't been in use for a very long time it might be a better idea to do a full clean of the pen.
In India most schools get kids to use ink pens when they start writing with pens. Whole generations grew up using fountain pens in school and sharing ink with each other.
is that so? that's interesting! as far as i have heard from friends, everyone is supposed to use exclusively ballpoint pens nowadays since their ink is the most resistant to water damage.
I first used one about 5 years ago, right after I started making pens from kits. I bought one just because it looked fancy, and used ebony wood. While there was a learning curve with cleaning, I Loved it!! Someone seen me using it at a craft show and bought it for $50! I was really hooked after that. Hopefully soon I'll post another video of making a new one
@@sparklefulpaladin I've got the Hayabusa shimmering in the TWSBI and the Ham shimmering in a Noodler's Ink Konrad. I've also got the Hayabusa non shimmer in the Pilot Petit1. I bought two bottles of De Atramentis, but the glitter is too thick for any of my pens
I’ve been a fountain pen user for several years. Nonetheless, I found your clip informative and well done. I wasn’t too hot on the music, though. I kept expecting it to stop, then a voice would say…..’Your call is important to us. Please stay……..’. Kudos anyway!
I ordered the pilot disposable fountain pen to try it out to see if I actually like writing with them before taking the plunge into getting an actual fountain pen. I found that I really do enjoy writing with them, but I have these gel pens I purchased recently and I want to use them up before I buy a fountain pen because I am positive I won't write with anything else but a fountain pen when I journal.
I did some research, bought a fine point Pilot, it writes on almost all paper including cheap composition books. I could not be happier with my pen. I got into these because Cross which I had used for 40 years stopped making their refills in the US and started making them in China and the writing quality was noticeably worse. I don't like throwing things away and prefer to reuse for as long as possible.
I've never been able to get into fountain pens... I never had one that didn't leak on me. I do love nibs tho as well as customization, like having different handles and nibs and inks and such... so, I got into dip pens. I even like needing to dip the pen every so often to re-ink it, there's just something very soothing about that which is helpful when I'm journaling.
I grew up using a fountain pen. I do still prefer them over ballpoints. Writing is much smoother and more comfortable. I also have 20 year old fountain pen that writes with very thin/scratcy lines (sometimes damages the paper) and its ink flow is very poor at times, but it has a nostalgic feeling. Ballpoints have the advantage of them being less leak sensitive when carrying one around and I worry less about losing a cheap ballpoint pen. :) Though I must say i've never bought a single ballpoint pen......I always get them for free as some sort of promotion gift. I still have many of them and I promised myself I would not buy any unless I finished them all. Now if only there was a pen that magically gave you beautifull handwriting.
I started with the Platinum Preppy and had a very bad time and almost completely gave up on fountain pens. It was months before I bought a TWISBI Eco and since then bought other pens to find my preference. I wish I had seen a chart on nib sizes and how they compare to gel pen sizes. I did discover that I although I like a 0.5 Energel pen, I like the medium to wet fine nibs best. For Kokuyo campus sarasara loose leaf paper, I might actually want to try a board nib.
Watching this video to set up my first Platinum Preppy with a dark purple ink (eyedropper conversion), and a TWSBI Eco with a pink and blue ink! Then I get to write my friend a letterrrr
as someone who is using fountain pens for 10 years i would say dont be afraid of making initial mistakes and do your own research. if you are afraid just start with a cheaper but good pen but not like pilot varsity. an actual fountain pen,
Thank you very much for this video! Ive recently got a couple fountain pens and ive been watching your fountain pen videos to learn how to properly take care of them and help them last long ^^ I really enjoyed the tips and advice, but the one i found most surprising was the kokuyo sarasara paper works well with fountain pens!! I had no idea! Thank you for your hard work making this video ^-^
Now that I have good fountain pen notebooks, I would love to know more about what sticky notes of different sizes are fountain pen friendly and will show off the shading inks.
I use a Platinum Preppy as my daily pen and absolutely love it! It's a lovely writing experience in my Hobonichi Weeks. 🥰💕 Eventually I will buy a converter since I have a pretty large bottle of Noodler's ink that I don't want to go to waste.
eekay has the right idea! Especially since the Platinum converters literally cost more than the entire Preppy pen... The Preppy is also a routine candidate for eyedropper converting. Jetpens carries the supplies you need for that.
One thing to keep in mind is to not push the nib down onto the bottom of the ink bottle. Maybe I'm wrong, but to me at 5:37 it looks a bit like the nib is being pushed into the bottom of the ink bottle.
You can buy converter filling kits, so you don’t have to stick your name in ink. Blunt end syringes are effective for filling as well, see those used a lot.
This video came out WAY too late for me. I started using a fountain pen in 1983. Old grey Esterbrook J barn find. When an Esterbrook was just thrown out because they didn't have a gold nib. So a lot of the information about modern ones didn't really apply. Not a cartridge converter or piston filler. Limited options for ink. No real fountain pen friendly paper. Fortunately the older inks tend to play nice with even cheaper paper, as my option was cheap student paper back then. And it's why I'm starting to gravitate towards getting vintage inks now. They're generally better behaved than a lot of modern inks, though definitely less light resistant. And regularly available for about the price of new, still unopened bottles. I'm older. My writing doesn't have to last for future generations, so... 😂
My fountain pen converter have some dry stubborn ink that wont get out. I found that using an ultrasonic cleaner can help forcing the ink to get out. But make sure you put it in another smaller container or the ink would go everywhere and ruin the cleaner's tank
@@sparklefulpaladin I’ve always wanted to try an eye dropper fill but I’m so nervous about it though. Not sure why, I guess it seems like a very easy way to spill ink absolutely everywhere
@@reddiewip ooh! Parker quink in black in a preppy. Great, saturated black. And orange Lamy in a Lamy Joy. (and a 3rd with a green shade from Diamine in a pilot metro) Pens and ink are expensive in my country, but I think one place sells sample sizes, which is awesome. You?
I wish I knew from the start that you aren’t limited to the pen manufacturers’ specific ink for the same brand pen. They might be the best choice in terms of wet or dry ink that works well with the pen, but there are so many great independent ink makers out there that can work with many fp brands.
Got my first fountain pen (a cheapo Hero one I got at my nearest stationery store. I bought cartridges and went ahead and shoved one in only to figure out the converter was the bit I didn’t use after the fact, so now I’m here lmao Pen seems to be working fine, it was their brand of cartridge, we shall see how things go when it comes to swapping it out 😂
Love the vid I got into the habit back in 2020 and I wish this video existed then lol. Had another idea for a video. I know one of the peeps at JetPens plays Pen and Paper Dungeons and Dragons/TTRPGs. Do a list of the perfect stationary for the one person who takes notes at the table. GO ALL OUT !!!!
😂I just understood why get pens aren't working for me! I've been learning to write with a fountain pen and I'm probably holding all pens at that angle... I've been rediscovering fountain pens and I'm very happy ! I never knew before about converters so it's a while new world of inks to discover❤❤❤
Well, you're very optimistic, my first Kaküno had an issue where ink never reached the nib after some reasonable time. Checking with the microscope I quickly found that the nib wasn't touching the feeder 🤯 The untrained eye would've had a very hard time making it work. So, unfortunately, I think it's true that fountain pens are not for everyone 😅
I've recently been doing some hand lettering and decorative calligraphy. The kit i purchased at first came with disposable brush and "calligraphy" pens, as well as a dip pen(but this had a single fixed nib). Some seemed to work well for me, but now i see I'm a bit limited in styles of writing due to width of pens. Etc. Any advice as to what items I should consider adding in order to branch out a little?
There are plenty of left handed fountain pens available for us lefties, we just have to search a little bit. Jet pens has plenty of fountain pens for beginners and advanced usage. Check them out. Truly a beautiful journey. Hope this helps. Good luck on your journey
I know I'd like a fountain pen because I like gel pens and they have a similar aesthetic(their writing) and they flow nicely. I also think fountain pens look cool as hell and would set me apart from others in school and work environments.
It really just depends on your budget and your desires! The preppy's a pretty solid choice, but if you want a super cheap option then have a look at the Pilot Petit! It's very small and may cramp your hand but its super cheap price will help you see if you like FPs in the first place. The other pen I recommend is the Monami Ollika.
excelente video, pero llevo semanas buscando una pluma estilografica, que pueda usar con tinta indeleble, a prueba de agua, soy bastante cuidadoso y no me importaría tener que limpiar la pluma estilografica después de cada uso, al utilizar tinta negra a prueba de agua, la idea es que posteriormente al entintado de un dibujo pueda aplicar colores al agua
Do you have any tips on how to clean my Pelikan M120? You turn the piston knob and you can't take the nib off unless you're a professional. I've tried all the other tips you gave.
I always use a quill (not qith the feather) and ive never seen something like that! I find it hard to have to refill it whenever it ends so i prefer the classical quill which u just dip in ink
In german the inks have seperate names Tinte is the ink that goes with fountain pens Tusche is the ink for dipping stuff I think tinte is dyed liquid while tusche is particles suspended in the liquid.. id assume thats why tusche glogs things Im not sure if they still do or if it was just was a my school thing but in primary school we all had to write with fountain pens.. past 5th grade noone cared what we used as long as its not pencil
I just bought a cheap india Ink and boy this is amazing. I got 500ml of ink which cost $10. The quality of the ink is just amazing. I think you should get better quality ink rather than choosing ink with fancy name. You should buy ink which has Water-resistant quality and Ink which will not fade away in future. Bought a japanese ink cost $50 and it become lighter the more time passes
@@JetPens Can't believe you replied and that also so soon. You guys need to open a store in India. there is so much potential. Do you deliver in India BTW?
Hi there! The ink is not shimmering ink, but it's Pilot Iroshizuku Syo-ro Ink (Pine Tree Dew): www.jetpens.com/Pilot-Iroshizuku-Syo-ro-Ink-Pine-Tree-Dew-50-ml-Bottle/pd/3514
eh.... have I been filling my pen wrong all this while? I dip the converter into the ink and then turn it over like a syringe and tap till the air bubbles rise and push out the air with the knob, then turn it over again to do a second fill in the ink bottle..... 😅
Hi there! Higher gsm doesn't necessarily mean the paper will be fountain pen friendly. In fact, many popular fountain pen paper brands have very low gsm; gsm is unrelated to whether the paper can take fountain pen ink. We recommend checking out our blog on fountain pen paper: www.jetpens.com/blog/The-Best-Fountain-Pen-Paper/pt/730
soak in warm water. If it doesn't help, try with neutral soap. You can try to use an old clean toothbrush to help the soap. If all fails, use a tiny bit of bleach in a cup, complete the cup about half way with water and soak the nib and only the nib there. The idea is to have less than 10% bleach in that water solution mix.
Do you have any suggestion how to clean waterproof ink that stained the pen? I have tried water, soap, rubbing, still the stain won't come off my pen. (I am using platinum waterproof black ink)
I bit late, but I was having trouble with some Noodlers ink on my white Lamy Safari What worked for me was a Mr Clean Magic Eraser. I saw at least one warning that it might be a bit abrasive. I didn’t have issues with my Safari, but that was a low stakes gamble on my part. Things that I’ve seen suggested that didn’t work for me: Water Dish liquid Soaking in diluted dish liquid Amodex (ink and stain remover)
I have the Zebra V301 Fine Point and I love it….. when it works. It usually writes well for about 15-20 lines and then the it starts getting patchy, and I have to go over my letters multiple times for the ink to flow through and finish the word. Which is annoying, eventually the ink stops flowing all together and nothing comes out as I write. It’s like the ink doesn’t flow fast enough to keep up with my writing. Anyone have any tips to stop this or information for why this happens. I’m about to give up on fountain pens all together
My huge mistake was using Noodler's Baystate blue with 2 platinum preppy and want to change the ink in one. I washed the pen but it continues to show residual ink in feed. 😢
Advice 1: cartridges sucks, buy converter as soon as you can. Advice 2: keep feeder wet. It sooo satisfying. Advice 3: don't buy too cheap pen, it's actually a paper scratcher.
Do you use fountain pens? Let us know what you wish you knew when you started out in the comments!
What I'd wished I'd known was that some pens are just hard starts and to avoid rubber grip pens - the latter especially can get icky after a few years!
That sometimes price does,matter.
bought a preppy from you guys last year, its great. Didn't know platinum sold a converter for it!
Bottled inks are not all built equal. Glitter inks are a trial by error, especially.
I wish I'd been brave enough to try a broad nib when I started out. The gel pens and ballpoint pens that I use are both fine tipped (0.38mm usually), so I thought that EF would be best. Turns out, I really, really enjoy broad and stub nibs on my fountain pens.
Biggest thing I wish I'd known when I started out was how much ink 80mL actually is!
I went from being scared of fountain pens in January to already having 6 now😅 they're addicting, especially with all the inks you can get!
the inks are addictive for sure, oh man, such gorgeous colors!
The inks are like nail polish for your writing, I'm obsessed
@@theyxaj thats such a charming way to put it
This is a bad sign for me.
@theyxaj true that 😂
For people who may have been gifted a vintage fountain pen from a family member or friend, I'd like to add the most MODERN fountain pens use cartridges and/or converters.
Vintage fountain pens tend to have a lever-filling system where you lower the lever, dip the pen nib in the ink bottle, and then flip the lever up and wait a second or two. If your vintage fountain pen has been well-taken care of, then the interior "ink bladder" should still be intact. If you flip the lever down and hear a crunch, then your pen has NOT been taken care of, and the bladder has deteriorated to the point of needing replacement. If you're not confident about your ability to take care of that, then I recommend looking online for people who are.
Extra Fun Fact about vintage fountain pen nibs: Vintage flex nibs tend to be more flexible than modern flex nibs. In fact, most- if not all -modern flex nibs are less flexible than vintage ones.
As a vintage pen collector, YES. But there's also other filling mechanisms like the Chilton, Touchdown, Vacumatic, aerometric, vintage Sheaffer's vac fillers, twist fillers, button fillers... On and on. 😉 (The wildly complex Sheaffer's Snorkel is a glorified touchdown at heart. Their earlier vac fillers are harder to restore.)
And flex... Brian Goulet recently admitted that there's no true modern flex pens, compared to vintage. I have a 1912 Mabie Todd with crazy flex. I've accidentally flexed the nib to 45° and it sprang back. Try that with even a modern dip pen designed to be more flexible than any fountain pen today manages. You'll ruin it.
Restoring a family member's vintage lever filler isn't that hard, just sometimes fiddley and takes patience to disassemble (sometimes the section is basically glued in. Time and gentle heat.😁) Then about 5 minutes to fit a new sac, wait for the shellac to dry from gluing the sac in place, bit of pure talc to let the sac slide in place, basically done, most instances. I personally did all of mine except for a Parker 51 Vacumatic (the tools needed ain't cheap.) With a razor blade, pair of fine tweezers. If I can still do them after a stroke...😁
@Paul Herman Yes! Thank you for the extra info! Especially with regards to the ink bladder replacement! I currently- and sadly -don't have any vintage fountain pens (except for one that's a double-sided pen and pencil combo with a gorgeous green-coloured marble-looking design) but I've definitely been looking for one that truly speaks to me while simultaneously being in working condition. I haven’t come across one, but I'm definitely hoping for one with a flex nib!
@@pixelsbykris5494 Combo ones are as easy as a basic lever filler. Pencil tends to still work, sac is just shorter because of the pencil part. And usually a budget pen, so a crap shoot if the section is pressure fit or glued (usually with shellac of some sort.) Like the dinky Peter Pan ones, basically cut the replacement sac in half (measure it. They don't hold a lot of ink already.)
A good, satisfying DIY is a Parker 51 Aerometric. Sac ("Pli-glas") is PVC and almost indestructible. Generally just a good cleaning (time consuming as the collector, the equivalent of the fins on a modern feed, holds a TON of dried, old ink, usually), maybe a good polish, back in business. Just got to like a hooded nib and a VERY stiff nib.
You want flex, before 1930 usually, and still hit or miss sometimes then. The Manifold nibs for writing on carbon copies seem to stem from the Lifetime nibs. VERY stiff. Waterman's, a Sheaffer's Junior that is close to softer than modern flex, Mabie Todd, Aiken Lambert, etc. I like pre WWI, myself, though those can be splotchy writers. A standard for flex is most Waterman's with their number 2 nibs. (The 12 is earlier and an eyedropper filler. The iconic 52 is lever. The 42 I think was a safety pen with a different mechanism than the Noodler's Boston Safety, which is a Moore design. Etc. Plus one of the "color" nibs from Waterman's. Maybe the Pink. I forget. 😁) Wahl-Eversharp even had some flex in the WWII era Skyline occasionally.
And can't forget the gold nibbed budget pens. Usually a Warranted nib, which, because they were thin enough, tend to have nice flex regularly.
Just either get one from a reputable seller or play roulette with eBay. Lots of sellers really don't know what they are selling. My Mabie Todd, a $200+ retail today was $60 because the antique store selling it just listed it as an old fountain pen. Sometimes you get lucky.😁😁
I highly recommend an Esterbrook to start down the rabbit hole of restoring your own. Well made, about 33 easily interchangeable nib units (I think they originated the concept) to suit almost anyone, very easy to restore. Sac size is a number 16, available on eBay, from Anderson Pens, or David Nishimura of Vintage Pens in Rhode Island. Or Pendragons in the UK. Tools needed are basic. Xacto knife or razor blade for scraping away dried shellac and cutting the sac to fit. Maybe slim, longer tweezers. Maybe dental picks for scraping away stuck dry ink sacs and maybe pulling the pressure bar. (Those are generally still good, but can rust.) Pair of spark plug boot pliers (same as section pliers for pen restoring, but 3x cheaper.
Sac needed is determined by measuring where they slide on the section measure in inches, divided by 64. Or, the Pendragons website lists many pens and the sacs used. Wahl-Eversharp Skyline uses a 16, too, but a tapered one. Parker button fillers use one that is slimmer at the opening end. The dinky ones tend to have a number 10. There's plenty of sizes made. To the original formula. On the same original White Rubber molds. The same thickness and standard as the higher end pens used.
You hear ink sacs tend to give out after about a decade. I have more than one that is still on the original sac for the last 70+ years. Proper maintenance seems to be the key. And avoid alkaline inks (a lot from Asia are alkaline.) Can dissolve the sac.
I currently own over 40 Esterbrook pens, and have yet to pay much over $25 each. Patience, the vintage market can produce some great pens at budget prices. My 1940s Conway Stewart (when they still made the whole thing themselves, unlike today) was $35 plus a new sac, for example. Just picked up a truly budget ladies pink Arnold for $7, today. (I have a soft spot for vintage budget pens.)
Early on, avoid steel nibs before WWII. Usually not stainless steel, except Esterbrook, so they can be pretty corroded where they contact the feed. Hope you are encouraged to try tackling one!
@Paul Herman Thank you again for all of this detailed information! It's much appreciated! I hope someone else can use it, too!
@@pixelsbykris5494 If I can penable someone to the rabbit hole of vintage, my pleasure.
I find the argument that it's cheaper to use bottled ink a bit disingenuous. Once you start buying ink bottles, it's scientifically impossible to stop at just one. Eventually you amass a massive collection of barely used inks, each bottle costing 15-20 uniball jetstreams!
Lol… it’s not cheaper for most but technically it’s cheaper per mL!
Yes, once you start you cannot stop. I've bought like 8 bottles now...
Real true FACT! (….10 plus bottle and counting)
Thanks I actually feel better knowing it's not just me 😂
I literally have 1 bottle lol but samples is where they get me
For a truly full fill with a twist converter or piston filler
1) stop turning the nob at around half full
2) take pen out of ink bottle and hold nib up
3) finish turning the nob the rest of the way drawing the ink in from the feed along with air
4) keeping the nib up turn the nob the other way to push the air out until you see ink coming from the nib or filler hole, you may see the odd bubble keep going until the ink stays.
5) insert pen back into the ink bottle and finish filling.
After that you should have a complete fill with virtually no air in the chamber.
Or just use a syringe :v
@@appolity that works too, the method I list above saturates the feed also
you could also just fill the converter itself then put it back in the pen, rotate it up a little and itll saturate the nib
@@icantswim8657 you can do that but it won't be a "truly full" fill, the feed stores a not insignificant amount of ink.
Locked and Fully Loaded
I began using fountain pens about a year ago since ordinary ballpoint pens always hurt my wrist after half an A4 page. I got a couple of Lamy Safari first since I initially considered a fountain pen primarily to be a tool. But it didn't take long before the Pokémon phrase, "Gotta Catch' Em All!" struck me. Today I have twenty-nine different Lamy Safari and two Kaweco Perkeo, and I'm not done collecting. I may have a problem. 😆
When it comes to paper, I only use either Oxford or Cambridge notebooks. They are cheap, have good paper and come in large pads, which is the best choice for me as I can write between 5-6 A4 pages daily.
Psa: if you are thinking you have to learn how to write differently with a fountain pen like I thought, don't worry! The only hard part for me was making sure I put the nib down at the right angle, but it didn't take me long to figure out. And you can use your normal writing style the same way as with gel pens. I have noticed though that my handwriting has changed some compared to when I take notes with a gel pen.
Also, there are cheap (like walmart cheap) papers that work with fountain pens. They just have to be smooth. Mead 5 star isn't bad for an EF nib.
Anything from India or Vietnam tends to work. Pen+Gear you gotta check the origin. Made in the United States, like writing on Charmin... Caliber from CVS is the same. Depends on the origin.
Dollar store notepads hold up surprisingly well, even to a broad or stub nib.
Here in Mexico we have the worst paper in the world, but fortunately Kawai stores bring very good Chinese paper that is very fountain pen friendly, also other asian stores like Miniso offer very good notebooks at reasonable prices 😌
If you think you have bad handwriting and there is no point in buying one I would still tell you to get one, have Dysgraphia which makes writing a pain severely impeding my progress in school, my mother (profile picture) bought me a fountain pen which really helped improve my handwriting. My current theory is that it forces you to write slower, improving your handwriting.
Thanks, I have issues with handwriting too. Will try it
I was thinking of a fountain pen for my nephew who holds the pen weirdly and has poor penmanship. I hope it works for him. Thanks
It improved my caligraphy too. I used to put too much force in writing, and I developed a habit of tracing again over some letters. The fountain pen really helped me.
Re: comments about owning many bottles of fountain pen inks, if you don't like a color you've purchased or are worried it may have expired, please consider donating inks to your local art programs. Whether K-12, community college, or university, such supplies are highly valued. Or consider giving inks to local artists who will likely put them to good use -- expired inks can be used for far more than writing and drawing! 😊
Expired inks? Technically speaking nobody has proven a fountain pen ink expires, many people in forums like Reddit have reported very old inks still usable. I have several Sheaffer bottles from the 50s and 60s and they look good as new. The only one I could consider as an exception is a Washable Green that has a particularly strong smell but it's not mold, anyway, it has a dedicated pen just in case.
in germany you start to learn how to write with a fountain pen often in elementary school. most here have at least one fountain pen most with cartridges, so the thought that some are intimidated by using them seems strange to me
in other countries, fountain pen was considered a thing from the past, the majority of education use gel-ball point pens for fast note and writing and the price of a basic fountain pen is a bit more pricy than an average disposable gel pen were those things that gatekeep people from discovering these gems. But I glad that the fountain pen community is growing stronger.
In the US, ballpoints are king.
I had my first few thanks to my dad. He was a pen junkie like me and he could spare a few for me to try out.
Same in France! I’ve had the same fountain pen for 7 years now :)
I had initially used a fountain pen at school in the 70s. It wasn't required, but I preferred them. Then in the early 80s I discovered Parker Rollberball and never went back to fountain pens. Recently I had to find a cheap enough fountain pen option because my child's high school requires them to use fountain pens for some of their work. Very unusual these days. The majority use either ballpoint, because they're cheap, or otherwise some type of rollerball, probably a gel one. My wife has never used a fountain pen.
I've become such a Fountain Pen enthusiast! After 2 years of practicing and using them, I'm super addicted to the way they write :)
When i was in high-school i built a fountain pen kit and its what i used my senior year, but that was a decade ago. Recently i rediscovered it, and was trying to figure out how to resurrect it. After watching this and your video on cleaning them, and also a bit of alcohol, its back from the dead
Jet pens is addictive. I love their things. Most are reasonably priced.
When I refill my fountain pen (which uses a piston converter), I usually twist the piston as fast as I possibly can to get more ink into the converter. It works super well and lasts for a longer time.
Watching this after impulse buying my first fountain pen, very helpful :)
As someone who still writes 90% of things by hand and in that Always with fountain pen where able, I'm glad to see I got it all right 😂😂
At my school we started out with pencil to learn the letters and then got our first fountain pen from school, we weren't allowed to write with ballpoint. And to me, this was bliss lol.
I got some ballpoints don't get me wrong, but if I can use my fountainpens then i sure will
I don't know who I'd be without my pink Kakuno, it's a life changer to have a GOOD pen!
When I first bought my fountain pen and wrote a little bit, I instantly knew I fell in love!!!
One more thing.... NEVER EVER DROP YOUR FOUNDATIN PEN! My heart sank when my Parker fountain pen rolled off the table and hit my marble floor nib first 💔💔
NGL I FELT THAT 🥲
@@cinnamontoast4192same dude
one time in my school it was break between two exams on the same day and some dude mustve been jealous of my fountain pen so he took one and slammed it agaisnt some surface and bent the nib horribly
thankfully o could get it fixed
My heart broke when I dropped my beautiful Waterman fountain pen nib down. It was a special gift from my husband. The pen had to be shipped to France for repair but it was worth it…a very sentimental gift,
As a student i recommend keeping a normal pen and correction tape because, if you have an error while writing, the normal pen is for writing on the correction tape because if you use a fountain pen on correction tape it could cause the fountain pen to rip the correction tape
The other way I've learnt to encourage a cartridge pen to start is running it under water for a few seconds - sometimes it feels like the capillary action is stuck and needs some "encouragement" to move.
good old Bernouli's principle in action
Please don't do that, you're just wasting water. You can get a very good result with just some drops of water through the breather hole of your nib or a chunk of wet cotton or tissue paper to moist the feeder. For very dried up ink or pens that haven't been in use for a very long time it might be a better idea to do a full clean of the pen.
In India most schools get kids to use ink pens when they start writing with pens. Whole generations grew up using fountain pens in school and sharing ink with each other.
Every pen is ink pen.
is that so? that's interesting! as far as i have heard from friends, everyone is supposed to use exclusively ballpoint pens nowadays since their ink is the most resistant to water damage.
@@immxnty yes now it's different, but in the 90s and early 2000s, fountain pens were mandatory from year 5 onwards.
I first used one about 5 years ago, right after I started making pens from kits. I bought one just because it looked fancy, and used ebony wood. While there was a learning curve with cleaning, I Loved it!! Someone seen me using it at a craft show and bought it for $50! I was really hooked after that. Hopefully soon I'll post another video of making a new one
Just got my first TWSBI Eco and I love it, especially with the Colorverse Coffee ☕️ ink. I do believe you recommended both in a recent video-BINGO!
I just bought a TWSBI go and I now have 3 bottles of Colorverse
Ooh, nice! My TWSBI Eco is currently inked up with Dominant Industry Fairy Forest shimmer ink.
@@sparklefulpaladin I've got the Hayabusa shimmering in the TWSBI and the Ham shimmering in a Noodler's Ink Konrad. I've also got the Hayabusa non shimmer in the Pilot Petit1. I bought two bottles of De Atramentis, but the glitter is too thick for any of my pens
good thing I watch this video before buying my 21ist fountain pen
i got my first fountain pen today and this helped me set it up! thank you!
I’ve been a fountain pen user for several years. Nonetheless, I found your clip informative and well done.
I wasn’t too hot on the music, though. I kept expecting it to stop, then a voice would say…..’Your call is important to us. Please stay……..’.
Kudos anyway!
I ordered the pilot disposable fountain pen to try it out to see if I actually like writing with them before taking the plunge into getting an actual fountain pen. I found that I really do enjoy writing with them, but I have these gel pens I purchased recently and I want to use them up before I buy a fountain pen because I am positive I won't write with anything else but a fountain pen when I journal.
I did some research, bought a fine point Pilot, it writes on almost all paper including cheap composition books. I could not be happier with my pen. I got into these because Cross which I had used for 40 years stopped making their refills in the US and started making them in China and the writing quality was noticeably worse. I don't like throwing things away and prefer to reuse for as long as possible.
I've never been able to get into fountain pens... I never had one that didn't leak on me. I do love nibs tho as well as customization, like having different handles and nibs and inks and such... so, I got into dip pens. I even like needing to dip the pen every so often to re-ink it, there's just something very soothing about that which is helpful when I'm journaling.
I grew up using a fountain pen. I do still prefer them over ballpoints. Writing is much smoother and more comfortable. I also have 20 year old fountain pen that writes with very thin/scratcy lines (sometimes damages the paper) and its ink flow is very poor at times, but it has a nostalgic feeling.
Ballpoints have the advantage of them being less leak sensitive when carrying one around and I worry less about losing a cheap ballpoint pen. :)
Though I must say i've never bought a single ballpoint pen......I always get them for free as some sort of promotion gift. I still have many of them and I promised myself I would not buy any unless I finished them all.
Now if only there was a pen that magically gave you beautifull handwriting.
I started with the Platinum Preppy and had a very bad time and almost completely gave up on fountain pens. It was months before I bought a TWISBI Eco and since then bought other pens to find my preference. I wish I had seen a chart on nib sizes and how they compare to gel pen sizes. I did discover that I although I like a 0.5 Energel pen, I like the medium to wet fine nibs best. For Kokuyo campus sarasara loose leaf paper, I might actually want to try a board nib.
Thank you for sharing this with us. Everyone stay safe, warm, happy and healthy. From Henrico County Virginia
Thank you. This video has helped me a lot. If I would have not seen this, I wouldn't have been able to fill my pen.
Watching this video to set up my first Platinum Preppy with a dark purple ink (eyedropper conversion), and a TWSBI Eco with a pink and blue ink! Then I get to write my friend a letterrrr
Thank you I new about the cleaning but not about the inks differnce between pens so thanks
as someone who is using fountain pens for 10 years i would say dont be afraid of making initial mistakes and do your own research. if you are afraid just start with a cheaper but good pen but not like pilot varsity. an actual fountain pen,
Thank you very much for this video! Ive recently got a couple fountain pens and ive been watching your fountain pen videos to learn how to properly take care of them and help them last long ^^
I really enjoyed the tips and advice, but the one i found most surprising was the kokuyo sarasara paper works well with fountain pens!! I had no idea!
Thank you for your hard work making this video ^-^
Now that I have good fountain pen notebooks, I would love to know more about what sticky notes of different sizes are fountain pen friendly and will show off the shading inks.
I use a Platinum Preppy as my daily pen and absolutely love it! It's a lovely writing experience in my Hobonichi Weeks. 🥰💕
Eventually I will buy a converter since I have a pretty large bottle of Noodler's ink that I don't want to go to waste.
eekay has the right idea! Especially since the Platinum converters literally cost more than the entire Preppy pen...
The Preppy is also a routine candidate for eyedropper converting. Jetpens carries the supplies you need for that.
One thing to keep in mind is to not push the nib down onto the bottom of the ink bottle. Maybe I'm wrong, but to me at 5:37 it looks a bit like the nib is being pushed into the bottom of the ink bottle.
Thank you for this, i was lost and wanted to learn about fountain pens but no idea how 😅
You can buy converter filling kits, so you don’t have to stick your name in ink. Blunt end syringes are effective for filling as well, see those used a lot.
Got my first 3 fountain pens (all kaveco sport) from jetpens.. they ship fast!!
Trying to make fountain pen videos now lol
This video came out WAY too late for me. I started using a fountain pen in 1983. Old grey Esterbrook J barn find. When an Esterbrook was just thrown out because they didn't have a gold nib. So a lot of the information about modern ones didn't really apply. Not a cartridge converter or piston filler. Limited options for ink. No real fountain pen friendly paper. Fortunately the older inks tend to play nice with even cheaper paper, as my option was cheap student paper back then. And it's why I'm starting to gravitate towards getting vintage inks now. They're generally better behaved than a lot of modern inks, though definitely less light resistant. And regularly available for about the price of new, still unopened bottles.
I'm older. My writing doesn't have to last for future generations, so... 😂
My fountain pen converter have some dry stubborn ink that wont get out. I found that using an ultrasonic cleaner can help forcing the ink to get out. But make sure you put it in another smaller container or the ink would go everywhere and ruin the cleaner's tank
who else refills their cartridges with a blunt tip needle? I love doing that bc it’s less wasteful imo
I'm planning to do this with my Preppy once I use the ink it came with. Or I might do an eyedropper conversion on it...
@@sparklefulpaladin I’ve always wanted to try an eye dropper fill but I’m so nervous about it though. Not sure why, I guess it seems like a very easy way to spill ink absolutely everywhere
Yes, I also feel wasteful when I throw away empty cartridges. I reuse them until they crack
@@dorcasmalahlela2805 right? It can be messy but to me that’s the fun of it :) what’s your favorite ink rn?
@@reddiewip ooh! Parker quink in black in a preppy. Great, saturated black. And orange Lamy in a Lamy Joy. (and a 3rd with a green shade from Diamine in a pilot metro)
Pens and ink are expensive in my country, but I think one place sells sample sizes, which is awesome.
You?
I wish I knew from the start that you aren’t limited to the pen manufacturers’ specific ink for the same brand pen. They might be the best choice in terms of wet or dry ink that works well with the pen, but there are so many great independent ink makers out there that can work with many fp brands.
Thank you so much for this! It really is going to help me ❤😊
I love fountain pens, and I always have a couple disposable fountain pens to give out to the curious.
Got my first fountain pen (a cheapo Hero one I got at my nearest stationery store. I bought cartridges and went ahead and shoved one in only to figure out the converter was the bit I didn’t use after the fact, so now I’m here lmao
Pen seems to be working fine, it was their brand of cartridge, we shall see how things go when it comes to swapping it out 😂
Love the vid I got into the habit back in 2020 and I wish this video existed then lol. Had another idea for a video. I know one of the peeps at JetPens plays Pen and Paper Dungeons and Dragons/TTRPGs. Do a list of the perfect stationary for the one person who takes notes at the table. GO ALL OUT !!!!
HAPPY WORLD ART DAY !!🤠😃 #JETPENS !!!!..I WISH YOUR CHANNEL WILL TOUCH THE HEART OF SUCCESS !!🌟😊
😂I just understood why get pens aren't working for me! I've been learning to write with a fountain pen and I'm probably holding all pens at that angle... I've been rediscovering fountain pens and I'm very happy ! I never knew before about converters so it's a while new world of inks to discover❤❤❤
Well, you're very optimistic, my first Kaküno had an issue where ink never reached the nib after some reasonable time. Checking with the microscope I quickly found that the nib wasn't touching the feeder 🤯 The untrained eye would've had a very hard time making it work. So, unfortunately, I think it's true that fountain pens are not for everyone 😅
I've recently been doing some hand lettering and decorative calligraphy. The kit i purchased at first came with disposable brush and "calligraphy" pens, as well as a dip pen(but this had a single fixed nib). Some seemed to work well for me, but now i see I'm a bit limited in styles of writing due to width of pens. Etc. Any advice as to what items I should consider adding in order to branch out a little?
Fountain pens are just superior!
... Except for all the ways they're inferior. They're superior for exactly the sort of writing you're better off just typing out.
I really want to get into fountain pens but I’m a heavy left handed writer-I can only enjoy from afar😂
There are plenty of left handed fountain pens available for us lefties, we just have to search a little bit. Jet pens has plenty of fountain pens for beginners and advanced usage. Check them out. Truly a beautiful journey. Hope this helps. Good luck on your journey
Lefties can definitely use fountain pens, but you'll probably have to get used to not pressing very hard when you write.
I was thinking about trying a fountain pen but understanding the maintenance needed I think I’ll just stick to my gel pens
Very useful. Thank you. I am so hooked.
Thanks for your video. Learned a few tips. Much appreciated.
I know I'd like a fountain pen because I like gel pens and they have a similar aesthetic(their writing) and they flow nicely. I also think fountain pens look cool as hell and would set me apart from others in school and work environments.
Yooooooooooooo perfect timing! I was just considering buying one :DDDD
Also is there any good fountain pen in the philippines?
It really just depends on your budget and your desires! The preppy's a pretty solid choice, but if you want a super cheap option then have a look at the Pilot Petit! It's very small and may cramp your hand but its super cheap price will help you see if you like FPs in the first place. The other pen I recommend is the Monami Ollika.
@@Ink2Screen ahhh thank you!
excelente video, pero llevo semanas buscando una pluma estilografica, que pueda usar con tinta indeleble, a prueba de agua, soy bastante cuidadoso y no me importaría tener que limpiar la pluma estilografica después de cada uso, al utilizar tinta negra a prueba de agua, la idea es que posteriormente al entintado de un dibujo pueda aplicar colores al agua
I always use ink from a bottle to refill my empty cartridges with a needle and syringe. I have never had one leak despite repeated refills.
Today I learned I’m supposed to fill my converter with the nib attached! 😮
Do you have any tips on how to clean my Pelikan M120? You turn the piston knob and you can't take the nib off unless you're a professional. I've tried all the other tips you gave.
I always use a quill (not qith the feather) and ive never seen something like that! I find it hard to have to refill it whenever it ends so i prefer the classical quill which u just dip in ink
Thinking of starting.
In german the inks have seperate names
Tinte is the ink that goes with fountain pens
Tusche is the ink for dipping stuff
I think tinte is dyed liquid while tusche is particles suspended in the liquid.. id assume thats why tusche glogs things
Im not sure if they still do or if it was just was a my school thing but in primary school we all had to write with fountain pens.. past 5th grade noone cared what we used as long as its not pencil
I got that Pilots ink. It says black but it isn't black enough! It's greyish.
Dzięki 👍
I just bought a cheap india Ink and boy this is amazing. I got 500ml of ink which cost $10. The quality of the ink is just amazing. I think you should get better quality ink rather than choosing ink with fancy name.
You should buy ink which has Water-resistant quality and Ink which will not fade away in future. Bought a japanese ink cost $50 and it become lighter the more time passes
what is the name of the first pen (wooden) in beginning of the video. By the way Huge Fan Jet Pens, Keep up the good work!
Hi there! That's a Pilot Custom Maple Fountain Pen: www.jetpens.com/Pilot-Custom-Maple-Fountain-Pens/ct/5393
@@JetPens Can't believe you replied and that also so soon. You guys need to open a store in India. there is so much potential. Do you deliver in India BTW?
Thank you very much for this useful video. 🙂
I use pilot fountain and Parker vector is that ok?
can Jinhao use Lamy Safari nibs as the nibs look 99% the same as I have a Jinhao 777 and Lamy Safari pens?
What ink is that blue green shimmering ? Looks awesome !
Hi there! The ink is not shimmering ink, but it's Pilot Iroshizuku Syo-ro Ink (Pine Tree Dew): www.jetpens.com/Pilot-Iroshizuku-Syo-ro-Ink-Pine-Tree-Dew-50-ml-Bottle/pd/3514
Jetpens you should make a dr grip line as pilot has so many pens and pencils!
eh.... have I been filling my pen wrong all this while? I dip the converter into the ink and then turn it over like a syringe and tap till the air bubbles rise and push out the air with the knob, then turn it over again to do a second fill in the ink bottle..... 😅
What gsm paper should i look for fountain pen use ?
Hi there! Higher gsm doesn't necessarily mean the paper will be fountain pen friendly. In fact, many popular fountain pen paper brands have very low gsm; gsm is unrelated to whether the paper can take fountain pen ink. We recommend checking out our blog on fountain pen paper: www.jetpens.com/blog/The-Best-Fountain-Pen-Paper/pt/730
@@JetPens Thanks. Will look through it 😃
Useful Info
There are also pens you can eye dropper fill.
Thank you
अच्छा है
If ink has dried on your dip pen nib how do you clean it?
soak in warm water. If it doesn't help, try with neutral soap. You can try to use an old clean toothbrush to help the soap. If all fails, use a tiny bit of bleach in a cup, complete the cup about half way with water and soak the nib and only the nib there. The idea is to have less than 10% bleach in that water solution mix.
@@cferracini Thank you I’ll try this
fountain is best pen
Do you have any suggestion how to clean waterproof ink that stained the pen? I have tried water, soap, rubbing, still the stain won't come off my pen. (I am using platinum waterproof black ink)
I bit late, but I was having trouble with some Noodlers ink on my white Lamy Safari
What worked for me was a Mr Clean Magic Eraser. I saw at least one warning that it might be a bit abrasive. I didn’t have issues with my Safari, but that was a low stakes gamble on my part.
Things that I’ve seen suggested that didn’t work for me:
Water
Dish liquid
Soaking in diluted dish liquid
Amodex (ink and stain remover)
just got a lamy safari
I use a 2.5ml injection to refil the cartridge
My biggest problem is figuring out what to write.
Why you told never to use India ink 😊😊 as Indian inks are the best quality with saturation
India ink is the name of a thick drawing ink not for fountain pens. Don't confuse with Indian fountain pen inks.
Can you make a video for taking fountain pen in airplane. Ore any kind of travelling. Thank you.❤
I have the Zebra V301 Fine Point and I love it….. when it works. It usually writes well for about 15-20 lines and then the it starts getting patchy, and I have to go over my letters multiple times for the ink to flow through and finish the word. Which is annoying, eventually the ink stops flowing all together and nothing comes out as I write. It’s like the ink doesn’t flow fast enough to keep up with my writing.
Anyone have any tips to stop this or information for why this happens. I’m about to give up on fountain pens all together
Is a parker vector standard fine tip fountain a good option?
My huge mistake was using Noodler's Baystate blue with 2 platinum preppy and want to change the ink in one. I washed the pen but it continues to show residual ink in feed. 😢
Advice 1: cartridges sucks, buy converter as soon as you can.
Advice 2: keep feeder wet. It sooo satisfying.
Advice 3: don't buy too cheap pen, it's actually a paper scratcher.
Awesome
How do you make the nib open to make more i k come out
Move the tines apart slowly and carefully.
Idk my school notebook is thinner than a graphite
I dunno can it work properly?