I have been having a fun time looking at fountain pen inks online lately. These have captured my attention, but there are shimmering ones too that are spectacular.
Sheening inks are fountain pen inks that change color depending on how much ink is put down on the page.
I do not remember noticing any when I’m out and about. I like sepia and it makes easy birthday/anyday presents for my family to buy as a gift to me. I’m into handwriting and calligraphy and found sepia to look well on my writing paper. A good quality pen ink from Liverpool is the Diamine brand and is retailed in two sizes
I do not own any cartridge pens though and all of mine are the bladder type
I haven’t gotten any Diamine yet, but I’m hoping I will soon. I’ve used Waterman ink, Parker ink, Pilot Iroshizuku, J. Herbin and Lamy inks so far.
I am restricted by what is available from retail outlets in my area; it’s either that for a limited choice or buying on-line with the usual P&P of an extra £3.99 upwards which makes some purchases prohibitive.
Nice! I hear that Oxblood is quite similar to Writer’s Blood which is the ink created by the Reddit community in collaboration with Diamine. This video says that Writer’s Blood is wetter and darker than Oxblood.
I used to make quills from feathers I found lying around. I had no skill at this and they weren’t at all fancy, with scratchy writing, but I had good fun playing around with them. And they were pretty.
Yes, I’ve been thinking about that very recently after I saw this video on a Kakimori dip pen. It has 4 nibs. She says that 3 of the 4 nibs can write almost a page without dipping except for, ironically, the fountain pen nib.
The advantage of those nibs is that they lay down a lot of ink. The advantage of a fountain pen is that I don’t have to keep dipping the nib or even changing a cartridge. In order to get the advantage of putting down a lot of ink, I’m thinking of getting a broad nib or a double broad nib.
I have a Platinum Plumix which is an italic nib. It doesn’t write fast. It’s more of a calligraphy nib which is probably how the stub and italic nibs would feel. Those are too big, I think.
I’ve been looking at TWSBI pens that hold 2-3 times the ink of most pens and come in broad nib sizes. By most accounts, broad nibs show the sheening inks the best.