Thank you for posting this! I was really wondering if there was any difference between the regular and premium Kaweco nibs. The premium nib does look like it writes great. I just wish they made all of their nibs "premium"--meaning that they write like they are supposed to. I love the Rickshaw case by the way--so cute!
Wow, I haven’t seen this Kaweco Sport in brown since now. I think you said Espresso? Can you please write me what‘s the precise name of this pen is? I would like to add it in my collection :-)
This is an excellent comparison. Have you found yourself ignoring one pen over another? Will the standard fine go completely out of your rotation? I don’t prefer dry writers, but sometimes I find a use case when forced to use non fountain pen friendly papers. Thanks so much for sharing! 🧡🖋
I think Im just going to switch the premium nib into whatever pen I want to use, unless I know that I need a drier nib. But Id probably be less picky if I was using one of the plastic kawecos, since theyre not as easy to nib swap, and the standard nib isnt -bad-
@@yobo93 Excellent. I only have plastic Kawecos so I think I will skip this nib purchase and stick with a different pocket pen altogether for a wetter writing experience.
@@tattooedcat good idea, as the premium nibs don't go into the plastic sport pens. The nibs in the cheaper kawecos are friction fitted and the premium nibs screw in
Kaweco nibs are hard starters until they are cleaned properly for usage, I own one and I was thinking of get it back to the store until I recalled that it was not washed, now it’s a wonderful writing instrument on the field.
Kaweco is German. It is pronounced kuh-VAY-ko (the German "w" is pronounced like a "v." The German word for water is "Wasser," [capitalized because German nouns are capitalized], and is pronounced "vasser"). Thanks for the informative video. I have been reluctant to get a premium nib until I saw this demonstration.
Too bad that Kaweco's consistency is totally hit-or-miss. Got a couple of premium nibs, some of them are literally hot-knife-in-butter, one of them is literally the scratchiest most unpleasant thing I ve ever attempted to write with, like trying to write with a twig on stone. Totally unacceptable for something that may actually cost more than the pen itself (if e.g. you replace a Kaweco Collection plastic pen's nib)
Wow! That's a significant difference.
Thank you for posting this! I was really wondering if there was any difference between the regular and premium Kaweco nibs. The premium nib does look like it writes great. I just wish they made all of their nibs "premium"--meaning that they write like they are supposed to. I love the Rickshaw case by the way--so cute!
I 100 percent agree! I would be willing to pay a bit more for a kaweco that came with this nib stock.
I see you stopped making videos. Too bad. I really enjoyed your pace, your thoughtfulness, and your honesty in your reviews.
Wow, I haven’t seen this Kaweco Sport in brown since now. I think you said Espresso? Can you please write me what‘s the precise name of this pen is? I would like to add it in my collection :-)
Thanks so much for this review. I've been considering the premium but was skeptical. Now I have to justify the cost.
This is an excellent comparison. Have you found yourself ignoring one pen over another? Will the standard fine go completely out of your rotation? I don’t prefer dry writers, but sometimes I find a use case when forced to use non fountain pen friendly papers. Thanks so much for sharing! 🧡🖋
I think Im just going to switch the premium nib into whatever pen I want to use, unless I know that I need a drier nib. But Id probably be less picky if I was using one of the plastic kawecos, since theyre not as easy to nib swap, and the standard nib isnt -bad-
@@yobo93 Excellent. I only have plastic Kawecos so I think I will skip this nib purchase and stick with a different pocket pen altogether for a wetter writing experience.
@@tattooedcat good idea, as the premium nibs don't go into the plastic sport pens. The nibs in the cheaper kawecos are friction fitted and the premium nibs screw in
Wow what a difference!
Kaweco nibs are hard starters until they are cleaned properly for usage, I own one and I was thinking of get it back to the store until I recalled that it was not washed, now it’s a wonderful writing instrument on the field.
Kaweco is German. It is pronounced kuh-VAY-ko (the German "w" is pronounced like a "v." The German word for water is "Wasser," [capitalized because German nouns are capitalized], and is pronounced "vasser"). Thanks for the informative video. I have been reluctant to get a premium nib until I saw this demonstration.
Good to know! Thank you for watching!
I’ve been wondering about this; thank you! Guess I need to do some shopping. 😂
This is the way 🤣
@@yobo93 😂😂😂 (
Too bad that Kaweco's consistency is totally hit-or-miss. Got a couple of premium nibs, some of them are literally hot-knife-in-butter, one of them is literally the scratchiest most unpleasant thing I ve ever attempted to write with, like trying to write with a twig on stone. Totally unacceptable for something that may actually cost more than the pen itself (if e.g. you replace a Kaweco Collection plastic pen's nib)
It's a shame you have to pay for 'premium'.
I hope this won't become standard in the industry!
Good reason to get into nib tuning.