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Fountain pens and ink?

Another pen question! I have been experimenting with rollerball type pens and I just cannot settle with them. I have a terrible tendancy to squeeze my pens and place too much pressure on the paper, and anything that encourages me to do that is out. So I have decided to experiment with fountain pens.

The first major stumbling block I have is being left-handed. That means I am likely to encounter issues with writing angle and with smudging. However, at least I know that fountain pens require much less pressure to write with, so I am willing to give a few a go. So far, I have unearthed an old fountain pen of mine and some even older ink. After a bit of a clean, it is writing fairly well and, as long as I keep my wrist rotated, I can write legibly without smudging everything. The main problem is that the profile of the pen, where the cap fits, requires me to hold it a bit too close to the nib, which pulls my posture in and brings my hand round to smudging territory. Its still nice to write with, though.

I am now on the lookout for fountain pens that write well at different angles, and that are not averse to being pushed across the page by left-handers. I am also hoping that fountain pen inks may have improved over the past 20 years (yes, the last time I dabbled with fountain pens was when I was a teenager).

Do any of you have any suggestions?

David

TOPICS: Lofi
mcnicks's picture

Here it is..

I got my Lamy Accent in the post this morning:

http://static.flickr.com/46/139847103_a1c3109bf7_m.jpg[/img">

So far, so good. It is a bit more 'scratchy' than my ancient, beat up fountain pen (a Parker Rialto) but its line is finer and, most importantly, it feels a lot easier to hold and write with. I was surprised at how difficult the Nibbler's Black ink was to work with: in all of my paper it seemed to feather and it took ages to dry. In comparison, the Private Reserve Sonic Blue ink worked well even on my cheap 'scribbling' paper. Undoubtedly this is more a statement about paper than it is about ink, but there you go.

 
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