#Parker fountain pen ink convertor
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
Nowbestdeals is a fast-growing one-stop online marketplace having 10+ years of working experience on Amazon and eBay that allows you to search, explore and find exactly what you are looking for. Finding high-quality products online can be a daunting task but with Nowbestdeals you don’t need to worry as we provide value for money products ensuring timely delivery. Backed by an expanding online shopping platform we provide a wide selection of products suited for every type of inclination and personality.
We have wide range of parker pens including fountain pen, ball pen roller pen all type of pens
Buy with safe payment through #paypal
have 10+ years of experience for #ecommerce export on #amazon #eBay
#parker pen#education#office stationery#Premium pens#Parker fountain pen ink convertor#Parker jotter ball pen#high quality pen#nowbestdeals#online shopping#onlineshopping#ecommerce#startup#parker
1 note
·
View note
Text
I said that I would do a little trip report if I ever bought some of those cheap Chinese fountain pens on AliExpress, well I bought two Jin Hao pens for around $20 total and wow, they're really nice. The nib on the silver one writes more smoothly than the nib on my Parker IM which cost me $100 back in 2011. I spent $8 on this pen. Goddamn. They're just both really nice pens with very smooth nibs and they came with convertors with very large reservoirs. The small converter was my only real complaint with the Jin Hao pen I already owned (the nib on that one isn't as smooth either). Also love how the Green one's clip is in the shape of a guitar, I didn't even notice that when I ordered it.
I should buy a few more bottles of ink. I really like J. Herbin inks, I use them exclusively. I should get a few more colours, they've got a nice pale purple called "Poussière de Lune", and I'm running low on the "Bleu Nuit" blue and "Lie De Thé" brown, I've got enough to last me a while though.
But yes, Chinese fountain pens from AliExpress, they're very good.
10 notes
·
View notes
Text
[Im talking about fountain pens btw]
I just got a great idea, please let me know if someone aleady made it!
A piece of plastic that attaches where a convertor/ink cartridge would go, but it makes it so you can actually use your universal ink cartridges and convertors for your Parkers/Lamys/all of the other brands that should go somewhere with their differently shaped connectors to hell.
#fountain pen#i hate that I cant use all of my cartridged inks because I “only” own a Parker and a Lamy and I cant justify buying another expensive pen#first world problems#lamy safari#parker
5 notes
·
View notes
Text
0 notes
Text
Top10 Best Parker Pen in India
Top10 Best Parker Pen in India
Parker is an American company , the manufacturer of pens. It was founded in 1888 by George Safford Parker in Janesville United States . before the introduction of ball point pen like Parker now that we are the no. 1 world wide writing instrument sales. In mid 1931 Parker created Quink (quick drying ink) because of which need of blotting was eliminated. our comapny is different from others as shown below. 10 Best Parker Pen in India are Parker Classic Gold GT Ball Pen and Parker Vector, Parker Classic Stainless, Steel GT Ball Pen, Parker Ultra Fine Navigato, Roller Ball pen ,Parker Vector GT Fountain Pen, Parker Vector Standard, Calligraphy CT Fountain Pen, Parker Frontier Gold Roller Ball Pen, Parker Aster Matte Black, Chrome Trim Ball Pen, Parker Vector Standard, Roller, ball pen, Parker Urban Matte GT ,Fountain Pen,, Parker Galaxy Standard, ball pen.
[wpsm_toplist]
[quick_offer id="12892"]
[quick_offer id="13260"]
[quick_offer id="13270"]
[quick_offer id="13281"]
[quick_offer id="13290"]
[quick_offer id="13547"]
[quick_offer id="13684"]
[quick_offer id="13700"]
[quick_offer id="13710"]
[quick_offer id="13738"]
Parker Classic Gold GT Ball Pen
It has carbide ball tip to control smooth flow, speedy writing and the right amount of ink flow. this new series of our pen are for the young generation that are willing to achieve the success of their life . it have slimmer but great grip for your race in the long run. we are working on our product as much as we can as a result we are gaining more sales.
following are some features of this pen .
Product Description :
Parker Classic Gold GT has a carbide ball tip to ensure smooth like butter and speedy writing, allowing just the right amount of ink flow.
It comes with a Streamlined style with more clean lines for a fresh take on the Parker design.
Parker Classic Gold GT features a push mechanism closer and closes with a satisfying click.
The Pen that Matches your style its another key point is ,gives you a smooth writing experience and you can write whenever and. however you want to . 2 Years warranty of manufacturing defects ..
Ink : Blue coloured .
Parker Vector
Given these points this pen is made for both student and professional in view of student its slim and best grip for exams and in view of professional it has a great appearance with grip that gives you confidence to make decisions.
Product Description :
with extra glossy finishing.
abs best plastic material body.
fine polished with stainless steel therefore extra smooth.
Parker Classic Stainless Steel GT Ball
Product Description :
comes with ink cartridge.
pen made on the basis of push mechanism.
slim and sturdy design.
waterproof and smudge proof ink.
Product Description
best body structure with matte finish.
body made of powder coating stainless steel.
2 Years warranty against manufacturing defects,proof of purchase required;.
Tungsten Carbide Ball.
Parker Vector GT Fountain
Product Description
Comes with Piston like Style Convertor.
Contact brand customer care on: [1800 102 3855 ] for any queries and issues related to the product.
Parker Vector Standard Calligraphy CT Fountain
Product Description
With best Glossy finishing.
Body Made with ABS Plastic and so Stainless Steel.
special Nibfor Calligraphy, Polished and Stainless Steel.
blue coloured.
Parker Frontier Gold Roller Ball Pen
Product Description
A bold stainless steel body in hence gold finish makes it a stylish pen for use.
It comes with paper Quink Ink also in effect which offers smother and safer, and reliable writing.
The cap-on/cap-off action enables the swift flow of writing and easy handling of the pen.
Parker Aster Matte Black Chrome Trim Ball Pen
Product Description
Comes with replaceable refill.
Stainless steel nib.
Parker Frontier GT Fountain Pen
Product Description
A solid high grade ABS plastic black body with glossy finish.
Parker Vector features a stainless steel nib, cap, accordingly and trim that add contrast to the coloured.
Parker Vector especially Fitted with twin-chanelled ink feed and collector system.
The cap-on action enables the swift flow of writing and easy handling of the pen.
Parker Galaxy Standard ball pen
Product Description
Quink overall flow ball pointed pen.
based on Twist Mechanism supplied with Ball Pen.
Golden Color powder coated clip
also read-https://microadia.net/blog/top-10-best-kurti-brands-for-women-in-india/
https://microadia.net/top10-best-parker-pen-in-india/
1 note
·
View note
Text
Yesterday morning I started a pen journal and wrote 14 entries using 14 different pens that I have. Rarely do I write continuous prose out entirely in longhand, yet ideas and words flowed just as easily as typing on a keyboard. Edited final draft below, illustrated by first drafts and the respective pens discussed. These are in no particular order; all but the last three are fountain pens.
1 Pilot Pluminix
Although really cheap, this Pilot Pluminix fountain pen is high quality and writes smoothly. The grip is comfortable with two indentations for the thumb and index finger to rest on. The pen has a short barrel, 12 cm with the cap on. The cap is screw-on and does not have a clip, but has two protrusions that keep it from rolling off the desk. The ‘F’ nib is in fact a narrow (around 0.5mm) italic (stub) nib, ideal for everyday handwriting. The thin strokes are quite fine, which is rare for an italic fountain pen. One of my favourite pens here. Here’s a review of this pen
2 Parker Vacumatic
This pen is amongst a bunch of old pens that my parents passed onto me. I had never tried writing with it until today. Apparently dad bought it some time ago, secondhand. On the barrel the words ‘Geo S Parker / Parker Vacumatic, made in USA / 63’ are blind stamped onto it. Some Googling revealed that it is a ‘Blue Diamond’ made between 1942–48. Quite a beautiful pen. After writing for a bit the ink seems to flow quite well. The nib is gold-plated, with the words ‘Artus radium point 93’ written on it. It is a little worn from use, I guess adapted to the writing angle of its previous owner.
3 Pelican c1992
My parents bought me this Pelican fountain pen before I left Hong Kong for the UK in 1992. It has a simple glossy black barrel with gold trims and clip. It was bought at a pen shop on the ground floor of the old Man Yee Building on Pottinger Street, which of course is long gone. Going overseas to study was a big deal in those days, and this expensive pen was a parting gift. The piston action for ink filling in this pen is fantastic: unscrew, dip in ink, screw tight, and it fills right up. The nib is gold-plated, a Pelican 120–500, HEF. I used this pen for my school work throughout secondary school and the nib is very worn, giving thick and thin lines. The line weight has become too heavy for my taste. It has always been slightly scratchy to write with.
I used to use the Parker ‘Quink’ blue-black ink with this pen. At one point I switched to washable blue so that mistakes could be corrected using a bleach ink-eraser and overwritten with a felt-tip of a similar colour. I never did like the purplish blue though. This ink is Lamy’s black bottled ink, which is a beautifully dense black.
4 Hong Dian forest series
This is a recent find on Taobao, a sleek black titanium fountain pen with contemporary styling made in China. How they can charge only ¥46 RMB is beyond comprehension. The pen feels heavy on the hand, possibly a good thing. The build is very solid, with a criss-cross texture on the barrel. This one is fitted with an ‘EF’ nib quich is quite fine and works well with my regular writing size. It writes very smoothly, probably the smoothest amongst all of the fountain pens I own. When you put the cap on there is a very satisfying click, an added bonus. The piston action convertor works well, and I’ve filled it up with the black Lamy ink.
5 Hong Dian forest series with a Chinese calligraphy nib
This is identical to 4 but fitted with a Chinese calligraphy nib. Not to be confused with a brush, a Chinese calligraphy nib is like a regular pointed nib but bent at an angle. This type of nib probably look a bit strange to Western eyes. It is designed for imitating the thicks and thins of Chinese/Japanese calligraphy by varying the angle at which you hold your pen (in brush calligraphy one varies the pressure to vary stroke widths). Of course you can use it to write in Latin or other scripts.
6 Sailor Profit calligraphy fountain pen
This is the same type of pen as 5, but Japanese-made. I first came across this type of pen at Tokyu Hands in Japan, where I bought it from. The ¥2100 JPY price tag isn’t exactly cheap, but in terms of quality it is comparable to 5. The angle of the bending is shallower, which means that one needs to hold it almost upright to get thin lines. It also means that a much thicker stroke can be produced.
7 Pilot Custom 74
This is probably the most expensive fountain pen I’ve ever bought. I bought it from a large stationery store in Sapporo, Japan (remember to seek out stationery stores when you go to Japan!). Japanese people do like their fountain pens, and Pilot and Sailor are the two most popular brands. Incidentally in Japan they call fountain pens 万年筆, literally ‘ten thousand year pens’. This series from Pilot is traditional in styling with a glossy black barrel and gold trims and clip. The nib is gold-plated. This series offers a wide variety of nib types with a range of thicknesses and degrees of flexibility. This particular nib is very flexible, so flexible that you can write copperplate script with it. The stroke width will transition from thin to thick by applying pressure on downstrokes. This is a very high quality product that writes very smoothly.
8 Lamy Safari
The Lamy Safari fountain pen is a classic design by Wolfgang Fabian. The bold, modern design won an IF design award in 2007. The nib is stainless steel, and I replaced the original fine nib of the two I have with 1.1 mm italic nibs. I own an orange one and white one (hard to keep clean). The series comes in all sorts of vibrant colours, and they keep introducing new ones. The design of the Safari is easily one of my all-time favourites, though of reasons unbeknownst to me, the two that I own never did become my everyday pens. This ink is Lamy’s Turquoise T52 bottled ink, which I use with the excellent piston action convertor. This colour is simply gorgeous, and is very dense. The industrial design of the bottle is also beautiful, with a ‘valley’ at the bottom so that one can get to the last remaining drop. A roll of perforated blotting paper is rolled into the base for wiping excess ink off the nib after filling – very considerate.
9 Memory, a Safari knock-off
No idea why this pen made the list, but here you go. This fountain pen came free with the Hong Dian black titanium pens. It looks exactly identical to the Lamy Safari with a clear barrel. The quality of the finish is nowhere near as refined however. The only redeeming factor is the smoothness of the ‘F’ nib – it writes really well. The ink is Sailor’s ‘Shikiori’, in Yuki-akai 雪明. The ink is way too thin and watercolour-like, not great for writing.
10 Rotring Art Pen
This is Rotring Art Pen is fitted with an italic nib. The styling looks dated by now, very 1980s. Hard to believe that this was my everyday pen during my art school years. My writing was much larger then. The 6mm line rules feel far too narrow for a pen this thick. This is supposedly the same thickness as the Lamy Safari (1.1mm), but apparently not. The nib is so worn from heavy daily use that the thin strokes have become quite thick. Rotring used to make a nib-sharpening stone, but I never bought one. The long staff/barrel serves no practical purpose, other than imitating a traditional calligraphy dip-pen. This supposedly black cartridge is too feeble. The original Art Pen ‘Jet Black’ cartridges were extremely dense.
11 Osmiroid
Back in 1993, I won first prize at the Osmiroid national schools calligraphy and handwriting competition in the UK. Part of the prize was a ‘luxury’ set of Osmiroid calligraphy fountain pens with a wide variety of nibs. The pens were cheaply made with poor quality plastic and finishing, poor ergonomics and with really poor ink flow. Never did use them much at all, though I still have them. This particular one is of slightly better quality that I bought from a close-out sale of a stationery store here in Hong Kong around seven years ago. It’s very uncomfortable to hold, hence I’m wiring at a weird pen angle. The Osmiroid pen company apparently dates back to the early nineteenth century, founded by educationist James Perry. It was bought by Berol Limited in 1989, and it doesn’t look like the brand exists anymore.
Cheap, everyday pens
12 Muji multifunction gel pen with mechanical pencil
I’m not a fan of fountain pens for everyday writing, and I’m not fond of ballpoint pens either. Real ink from a gel or roller ball pen is what I prefer. Clean lines and quick drying ink are important. I’ve experimented with many (mainly Japanese) brands, and find that Muji’s clear barrel muiltifunction gel pen with mechanical pencil to be the best. As of today, I don’t see this pen in their online catalogue anymore. Good that I still have a large stash of refills in my drawer.
I think it was Roger Black who said that if the first colour was black, then the second colour would be red. This is true with early manuscripts, letterpress printing (the word ‘rubrication’ means the addition of red, for both manuscripts and early incunabular) as well as in manual typewriters. Red is very useful for differentiating content and to provide an additional layer of information. That’s why in my multifunction pen I have red and black inks, and with a mechanical penil as well, my arsenal of writing implements is complete. I find 0.4mm to be ideal, for my current size of handwriting on 6mm ruled paper. The pencil is 0.5mm with HB lead, for tentative thoughts and mark-making, say, constructing a grid for a page layout.
13 Pentel Sign Pen
To extend the repretoire a bit, I also used to carry a double-tip Pentel Sign Pen around with black and red ink. This is a thick felt-tip for those ocassions where further emphasis is needed, and for sketching and ideation. This is a variant of the classic Pentel single-colour Sign Pen debuted in 1963.
14 Pilot Frixion four-colour
For awhile I also used another multifunction pen – the Pilot Frixion with four colours. It is a hugely popular product. The ink is thermal sensitive, and the heat generated by rubbing with the silicone eraser provided removes the ink marks without residues. This series comes in many variations, but styling of the four-colour multifunction one is ugly, and the ink feeble. Though to be fair the thick barrel with rubber grip is actually quite comfortable to hold. The Frixion series won a Good Design Award in 2015. Overall it’s a very good series of products.
I’ve leave my musings on writing next time.
(first draft written by hand, final draft in Byword)
Yesterday morning I started a pen journal and wrote 14 entries using 14 different pens that I have. Rarely do I write continuous prose out entirely in longhand, yet ideas and words flowed just as easily as typing on a keyboard. Edited final draft below, illustrated by first drafts and the respective pens discussed. These are in no particular order; all but the last three are fountain pens.
1 Pilot Pluminix
Although really cheap, this Pilot Pluminix fountain pen is high quality and writes smoothly. The grip is comfortable with two indentations for the thumb and index finger to rest on. The pen has a short barrel, 12 cm with the cap on. The cap is screw-on and does not have a clip, but has two protrusions that keep it from rolling off the desk. The ‘F’ nib is in fact a narrow (around 0.5mm) italic (stub) nib, ideal for everyday handwriting. The thin strokes are quite fine, which is rare for an italic fountain pen. One of my favourite pens here. Here’s a review of this pen
2 Parker Vacumatic
This pen is amongst a bunch of old pens that my parents passed onto me. I had never tried writing with it until today. Apparently dad bought it some time ago, secondhand. On the barrel the words ‘Geo S Parker / Parker Vacumatic, made in USA / 63’ are blind stamped onto it. Some Googling revealed that it is a ‘Blue Diamond’ made between 1942–48. Quite a beautiful pen. After writing for a bit the ink seems to flow quite well. The nib is gold-plated, with the words ‘Artus radium point 93’ written on it. It is a little worn from use, I guess adapted to the writing angle of its previous owner.
3 Pelican c1992
My parents bought me this Pelican fountain pen before I left Hong Kong for the UK in 1992. It has a simple glossy black barrel with gold trims and clip. It was bought at a pen shop on the ground floor of the old Man Yee Building on Pottinger Street, which of course is long gone. Going overseas to study was a big deal in those days, and this expensive pen was a parting gift. The piston action for ink filling in this pen is fantastic: unscrew, dip in ink, screw tight, and it fills right up. The nib is gold-plated, a Pelican 120–500, HEF. I used this pen for my school work throughout secondary school and the nib is very worn, giving thick and thin lines. The line weight has become too heavy for my taste. It has always been slightly scratchy to write with.
I used to use the Parker ‘Quink’ blue-black ink with this pen. At one point I switched to washable blue so that mistakes could be corrected using a bleach ink-eraser and overwritten with a felt-tip of a similar colour. I never did like the purplish blue though. This ink is Lamy’s black bottled ink, which is a beautifully dense black.
4 Hong Dian forest series
This is a recent find on Taobao, a sleek black titanium fountain pen with contemporary styling made in China. How they can charge only ¥46 RMB is beyond comprehension. The pen feels heavy on the hand, possibly a good thing. The build is very solid, with a criss-cross texture on the barrel. This one is fitted with an ‘EF’ nib quich is quite fine and works well with my regular writing size. It writes very smoothly, probably the smoothest amongst all of the fountain pens I own. When you put the cap on there is a very satisfying click, an added bonus. The piston action convertor works well, and I’ve filled it up with the black Lamy ink.
5 Hong Dian forest series with a Chinese calligraphy nib
This is identical to 4 but fitted with a Chinese calligraphy nib. Not to be confused with a brush, a Chinese calligraphy nib is like a regular pointed nib but bent at an angle. This type of nib probably look a bit strange to Western eyes. It is designed for imitating the thicks and thins of Chinese/Japanese calligraphy by varying the angle at which you hold your pen (in brush calligraphy one varies the pressure to vary stroke widths). Of course you can use it to write in Latin or other scripts.
6 Sailor Profit calligraphy fountain pen
This is the same type of pen as 5, but Japanese-made. I first came across this type of pen at Tokyu Hands in Japan, where I bought it from. The ¥2100 JPY price tag isn’t exactly cheap, but in terms of quality it is comparable to 5. The angle of the bending is shallower, which means that one needs to hold it almost upright to get thin lines. It also means that a much thicker stroke can be produced.
7 Pilot Custom 74
This is probably the most expensive fountain pen I’ve ever bought. I bought it from a large stationery store in Sapporo, Japan (remember to seek out stationery stores when you go to Japan!). Japanese people do like their fountain pens, and Pilot and Sailor are the two most popular brands. Incidentally in Japan they call fountain pens 万年筆, literally ‘ten thousand year pens’. This series from Pilot is traditional in styling with a glossy black barrel and gold trims and clip. The nib is gold-plated. This series offers a wide variety of nib types with a range of thicknesses and degrees of flexibility. This particular nib is very flexible, so flexible that you can write copperplate script with it. The stroke width will transition from thin to thick by applying pressure on downstrokes. This is a very high quality product that writes very smoothly.
8 Lamy Safari
The Lamy Safari fountain pen is a classic design by Wolfgang Fabian. The bold, modern design won an IF design award in 2007. The nib is stainless steel, and I replaced the original fine nib of the two I have with 1.1 mm italic nibs. I own an orange one and white one (hard to keep clean). The series comes in all sorts of vibrant colours, and they keep introducing new ones. The design of the Safari is easily one of my all-time favourites, though of reasons unbeknownst to me, the two that I own never did become my everyday pens. This ink is Lamy’s Turquoise T52 bottled ink, which I use with the excellent piston action convertor. This colour is simply gorgeous, and is very dense. The industrial design of the bottle is also beautiful, with a ‘valley’ at the bottom so that one can get to the last remaining drop. A roll of perforated blotting paper is rolled into the base for wiping excess ink off the nib after filling – very considerate.
9 Memory, a Safari knock-off
No idea why this pen made the list, but here you go. This fountain pen came free with the Hong Dian black titanium pens. It looks exactly identical to the Lamy Safari with a clear barrel. The quality of the finish is nowhere near as refined however. The only redeeming factor is the smoothness of the ‘F’ nib – it writes really well. The ink is Sailor’s ‘Shikiori’, in Yuki-akai 雪明. The ink is way too thin and watercolour-like, not great for writing.
10 Rotring Art Pen
This is Rotring Art Pen is fitted with an italic nib. The styling looks dated by now, very 1980s. Hard to believe that this was my everyday pen during my art school years. My writing was much larger then. The 6mm line rules feel far too narrow for a pen this thick. This is supposedly the same thickness as the Lamy Safari (1.1mm), but apparently not. The nib is so worn from heavy daily use that the thin strokes have become quite thick. Rotring used to make a nib-sharpening stone, but I never bought one. The long staff/barrel serves no practical purpose, other than imitating a traditional calligraphy dip-pen. This supposedly black cartridge is too feeble. The original Art Pen ‘Jet Black’ cartridges were extremely dense.
11 Osmiroid
Back in 1993, I won first prize at the Osmiroid national schools calligraphy and handwriting competition in the UK. Part of the prize was a ‘luxury’ set of Osmiroid calligraphy fountain pens with a wide variety of nibs. The pens were cheaply made with poor quality plastic and finishing, poor ergonomics and with really poor ink flow. Never did use them much at all, though I still have them. This particular one is of slightly better quality that I bought from a close-out sale of a stationery store here in Hong Kong around seven years ago. It’s very uncomfortable to hold, hence I’m wiring at a weird pen angle. The Osmiroid pen company apparently dates back to the early nineteenth century, founded by educationist James Perry. It was bought by Berol Limited in 1989, and it doesn’t look like the brand exists anymore.
Cheap, everyday pens
12 Muji multifunction gel pen with mechanical pencil
I’m not a fan of fountain pens for everyday writing, and I’m not fond of ballpoint pens either. Real ink from a gel or roller ball pen is what I prefer. Clean lines and quick drying ink are important. I’ve experimented with many (mainly Japanese) brands, and find that Muji’s clear barrel muiltifunction gel pen with mechanical pencil to be the best. As of today, I don’t see this pen in their online catalogue anymore. Good that I still have a large stash of refills in my drawer.
I think it was Roger Black who said that if the first colour was black, then the second colour would be red. This is true with early manuscripts, letterpress printing (the word ‘rubrication’ means the addition of red, for both manuscripts and early incunabular) as well as in manual typewriters. Red is very useful for differentiating content and to provide an additional layer of information. That’s why in my multifunction pen I have red and black inks, and with a mechanical penil as well, my arsenal of writing implements is complete. I find 0.4mm to be ideal, for my current size of handwriting on 6mm ruled paper. The pencil is 0.5mm with HB lead, for tentative thoughts and mark-making, say, constructing a grid for a page layout.
13 Pentel Sign Pen
To extend the repretoire a bit, I also used to carry a double-tip Pentel Sign Pen around with black and red ink. This is a thick felt-tip for those ocassions where further emphasis is needed, and for sketching and ideation. This is a variant of the classic Pentel single-colour Sign Pen debuted in 1963.
14 Pilot Frixion four-colour
For awhile I also used another multifunction pen – the Pilot Frixion with four colours. It is a hugely popular product. The ink is thermal sensitive, and the heat generated by rubbing with the silicone eraser provided removes the ink marks without residues. This series comes in many variations, but styling of the four-colour multifunction one is ugly, and the ink feeble. Though to be fair the thick barrel with rubber grip is actually quite comfortable to hold. The Frixion series won a Good Design Award in 2015. Overall it’s a very good series of products.
I’ve leave my musings on writing next time.
(first draft written by hand, final draft in Byword)
(simutaneously published in nontxt.com)
0 notes
Text
UPDATE - Fountain Pen Ink... Felt Tip Pen
Still not clogged, better then most of my disposible Felt Tips already!
These images are the stock images from the Yookers Site... They are better then my images
I got a Yooker Pen as part of their KickStarter. On their site the pen I got would be $52 +S&H
Black Tip Felt Pen
Okay everybody is going $52 for a Felt Tip pen.. Are you crazy!!!
First if you are comparing the Yooker to a Pilot Felt Marker or a disposable artist fineliner pen. I agree with you. Those are around a dozen for $10 on Amazon... But you are comparing them to to wrong type of pen. Closest I can find in quality of the pen is actually a Parker IM, in fact probably Parker 5th is Parker trying to do a refillable Fineliner.
Yes I know MontBlanc makes Fineliners
Yes that is right the main competitors for the Yooker are MontBlanc (a $300ish pen with a $19 refill.. And that is at Amazon US) and Parker 5th, ( a $50ish pen with a $11 refill)
I do not own a MontBlanc Fineliner although I have used one... I think the Montblanc Refill is better then the Parker 5th refill.
I own and use rather regularly a Parker 5th in gunmetal. It is not the amazing pen they bill it as, sorry Parker but your Rollerballs and Fountain Pens are much better.
I have not used the Yooker long enough to know how long it will be before it Clogs and I need to replace the tip. Only had it about a week.
But here are some things I do like:
Currently the Sections-Nibs are $17
The Yooker uses Fountain Pen ink
Short International
Came with a Cartridge Convertor
If you want to you can by Private Reserve or Montblanc cartridges for the Yooker
If you know how to use a convertor with a fountain pen you can use your favorite bottled ink
It is Very similar in feel to a Parker IM metal body pen...
The cap is Screw On, it may be in my head but I feel any brush/felt/fineliner pen should be a screw closed cap
Over all
If you are a person who likes Fineliners but wants to lower your plastic waste, and/or likes Fountain Pen ink. I would suggest trying a Yooker, to be honest if you are a fountain pen person but want something less stand outish, Maybe even where hoping the Parker 5th would be a gateway to non-plastic non-disposable FineLiners. Cause the MontBlanc is just too out of budget. Try the Yooker
0 notes
Video
tumblr
PARKER Duofold Centennial Fountain Pen, Prestige Burgundy Chevron, Fine Solid Gold Nib, Black Ink and Convertor (1945418) https://ift.tt/2FWEBRb List Price: $970.00 Deal Price: $517.98 You Save: $73.47 (12%) PARKER Duofold Centennial Fountain Pen, Prestige Burgundy Chevron, Fine Solid Gold Nib, Black Ink and Convertor (1945418) Expires May 12, 2018 https://ift.tt/2HwnThl May 09, 2018 at 05:10PM https://ift.tt/2K3v5OP
0 notes
Photo
Parker Deluxe Fountain Pen Ink Convertor (S0050300) Used to attract ink from bottles to replenish your fountain pen or to clean historic ink out.
0 notes