Now more than one fountain pen

During my fountain pen fad I had many many pens from the Waterman Edison, Just about every modern Parker, vintage Parkers, and other makes. Of course how each pen suits your hand is probably the most important thing, but for quality, ink flow, nib smoothness and all round performance I like Pelikan. For value for money performance Pilot 78G. I still have several Parker 45 Flighters, 2 Pilot 78Gs and a Parker Profile which is suprisingly good for a cheap pen. Haven't used them for ages so I may see what else I can find in drawers and start writing with them again. Or sell them and buy razors :)
Pelikan are my favourite fountain pens too, for the same reasons you like them. I have over 100 vintage and modern fountain pens of which six are Pelikans, both vintage and modern.
 
It's been a while but thought you might like to see my latest pen acquisition. Parker Urban steel cap and body, plastic grip section. Takes standard Parker cartridges but I refilled an empty cartridge with Diamine Onyx Black ink using a syringe.

Bought it from "Fountain Pen UK BST" on Facebook for less than a tenner. Unusual shape where the thinner waist kind of fits into the hand nicely. When I first got it it skipped sometimes, especially when starting writing. I smoothed the nib a little and that seems to have cured it plus it writes with much less feedback.

Parker_Urban-1_zpsohf3rscw.jpg


Parker_Urban-2_zpsfycgzplh.jpg


Parker_Urban-3_zpswmdqt3gm.jpg
 
In general Diamine inks are brilliant, but Jet Black is not one of my favourites, it's just not black enough. I've not tried the Onyx Black, but I am a fan of Herbin Perle Noire, it's very black, has some water resistance, but is also extremely well behaved.
 
For a black ink that's properly black, as opposed to dark grey, I like Aurora Black. It's comparatively expensive, but it flows well, and seems to lubricate nicely, which is handy if you have a pen with a nib that has a bit more feedback than you'd like.
 
Back
Top Bottom