#rollerball pens
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goldentemplariumcrow · 6 months ago
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hi! which kind of pen do you think it’s the most comfortable to write with, fountain pens or rollerballs? i’m still learning about pens and i tried googling the differences between them but some websites say that fountain pens are more comfortable and others say that they’re basically the same thing, but rollerballs are more practical. also, do you think fountain pens are a lot of work? i heard someone saying that fountain pens are not worth it because the ink doesn’t even last a week and it leaks and you have to buy the right kind of paper and stuff like that… i’m still curious about fountain pens though, and i wanted to hear your opinion about it! :) thanks in advance!
Heyo, my fellow stationery lover! 🥰💕🖋🖊
It's so nice of you to ask about this, and I totally understand how it all sounds confusing depending on who and where you take your information from. I, myself, had a long run over the years to learn the differences and what works best with my writing style.
So, I'll start retroactively and sort of correct your friend there, because fountain pens and rollerball pens both need good paper to give their best performance. However, as a beginner I'd tell you to work with what you have, which means adequating your chosen pen nib to the paper you have at your immediate disposal.
As an example: I started writing on printer paper and normal everyday notebooks (those you buy in bulk from dollar store to be more precise). Sure, I didn't have the luxury of writing on both sides of the pages, because both fountain pens and rollerballs are usually heavy on the dispense of their inks in this kind of paper, but it taught me about size and flow.
Tip/Nib Size:
Fountain pens work on the range of Extra Fine, Fine, Medium, Broad, Double Broad and Stub (stubs often go from 1.0 to 3.0 size, the bigger the number the larger it'll be, they're usually associated with Goth Style calligraphy). The stub nib is also known as the italic nib, it writes thin on the horizontal and diagonals, but when doing a vertical, downward stroke, it becomes thick. (You can see some different nib sizes on the image bellow)
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Rollerball pens work on a range of 0.3, 0.5, 0.7, 0.8, 1.0, 1.5, and 1.9 tips, with the easiest tips to find going from 0.3 to 0.8. And their tips will always be just simple round ones with not much variation in terms of colors. (I'm sorry for not having a photo to explain this one, but my rollerball has given up on me this Monday morning and ran the last of its drops of ink 😂 I need to get a new one)
Flow:
Fountain pens and rollerballs work in kind of the same manner in terms of dispensing their ink, they work through capilary mechanisms and gravity. You have to have them down in contact with the paper to make the ink go down to the tip/nib in order to make it work.
The flow usually derives from the kind of ink that are being dispensed and the kind of nib/tip on your pen. The bigger the nib/tip size the more ink will be dispensed on the paper and so the faster you'll need to fill the fountain pen back or buy a new rollerball/refill your rollerball.
About fountain pens not being worth it...
That's a common misconception, because in today's world a lot of people prefer to exchange customization for practicality.
Fountain pens require a little bit of maintainance, because most aren't disposable, the biggest number of them, even the cheapest ones, are meant to last if you don't simply throw it in your bag and have the bag be benchpressed by a rollertruck or be in the way of an explosion (et me tell you, I've yet to find an every day hurdle that can break a Lamy Safari PBS body and stainless steel nib @-@ it scratches and fades, but doesn't break, and I have this baby for around 10 years now, it faced two college degrees with me). A fact that becomes more evident when you see the fact that most brands design converters for their pens.
Most fountain pens can be customized to your liking, from the nib, to the feeder (the part that brings the ink from the cartridge/reservoir/converter) to the nib, to the body, to the ink you write with. They become a sort of statement of your style.
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From top to bottom:
- Majohn Moonman C1 (10USD) (can be used with a converter, but I prefer to fill the body with ink for maximum capacity, around 5ml)
- Lamy Safari (20-30USD)
- Wing Sung 3008 (5USD) (built in piston sucks the ink into the pen for maximum capacity, around 2.5ml)
- Pilot Kakuno (15USD) (with Con-70 converter, around 1.7ml)
- Jinhao Centurion (10USD)
- Jinhao 9019 Dadao (10USD) (biggest converter I've ever seen, carrying up to 3ml of ink)
- Jinhao 82 (3USD)
- Tramol T100 (4USD) (full body holds 2ml)
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A comparison between the nibs of the Jinhao 9019 Dadao, Jinhao 82 and Majohn Moonman C1. As you can see, I have the heartbit limited edition fine nib on the Dadao, while the 82 has a dual color nib and the Majohn has a long and slightly narrower nib. These are all customizations.
As you can see, there are fountain pens for all styles, likings and price ranges. From the thicc ones with double and triple Cs (I'm looking at you, Dadao) to the more minimalist and sturdy ones, like the Lamy Safari, which is a model that's been around in the market since the 80s and, if you want to be even more conservative, there's always the Pilot 78G and 78G+ that's been around since 1991; if you're one to love traveling, it's hard to go wrong the brass body Traveler's one too.
About the ink not lasting, spillages and all that jazz...
When you buy a fountain pen, they usually come with an ink cartridge, which in my experince last around 2 weeks with me writing daily for 8 hours a day (for my daytime job). However, that depends on the size of the cartridge, smaller ones won't last as long, but they're often the ones you can find more easily on your local stores, since this makes for a bigger compatibility between pen and cartridge due to the thickness of certain barrels (some brands have their own style of cartridges, like Parker and Pilot).
Personally I remedy this by simply having a bottle of Noodler's Ink (this one of the link even comes with a nice beginner friendly pen in the package) on the side and a make-up siringe to suck all the ink from the bottle to the cartridge that comes with the pen. It's much more enviromentally friendly than the rollerballs that usually aren't refillable.
The whole spillage happens because of mishandling. I personally only had one single episode when I was a newbie and brought a fountain pen on an airplane, the pressure change made the ink go kaboom in the pen, but my cap held up well and all I had to do was wash it once I landed. I know some people who are heavy handed also have ink spillage accidents, but again, that's due to mishandling, as fountain pens don't require pressure to get the ink writing on the paper. And, of course, like any liquid, if you shake it hard enough, it will, eventually, spill everywhere in one way or another, but that is a risk that also exists on rollerballs.
Which one is better: Fountain Pens or Rollerball Pens?
I can't emphazise enough that this is an opinion and I enjoy most writing instruments, for each has their very own beauty.
Personally, see fountain pens as a long-time commitment while the rollerballs are more of a shortterm "save me in a pinch" type of pen.
Fountain pens often help correct writing vices that cause harm to the hands and wrists, they train you to slow down for a moment to mind your grip and angle, and in exchange give you the beautiful experience of premium writing with an instrument that's all your own, if not by nib and body, by ink, because every single fountain pen lover has their very own favorite (if not beloved) shade. They give you a freedom that other pens don't usually give in terms of color, you can even like a simple everyday blue, but you can choose from a Pilot Kon-peki to a Waterman Inspire Blue, and don't get me started on the inks that change shade once they dry out or that have metalic shimmer mixed in their composition.
Rollerballs will save me if I don't have my fountain pen with me (I carry a Lamy Safari everywhere I go) and need to jolt down some quick notes, but not write for a long while. They don't feel so good, because my angle of writing (near 45°).
In summary: I wrote this post defending the fountain pens, because I know the discourse of them being obsolete and inpractical that's everywhere, but I see both rollerballs and fountain pens as excellent writing instruments that deserve equal space in our lives, pen pouches and pencil cases 🥰💕🖋🖊
I hope this helps you a little, my fellow writing friend.
Happy writing!
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tabrownwv · 9 months ago
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Retro 51 Cat Rescue rollerball pen and case
Got an order from Goulet Pens today I ordered the Retro 51 Tornado Rollerball pen – cat rescue series 5 and a portion of the proceeds will be made to Take Me Home Pet Rescue, a Texas based nonprofit dedicated to finding loving homes for rescued animals and addressing homeless pet overpopulation. If you want to check it out, here’s the link – Retro 51 cat rescue pen there is also a dog design as…
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jazzzzzzhands · 1 year ago
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Inktober 2023 Yr 8. Day 12: Spicey Feels like a real family dinner..
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themetalvirus · 2 months ago
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anyway im normal
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satinsands · 1 month ago
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Day 14, 15, 16, 17, 18 and 19:
So I remembered that I have a set of (expensive qwq) alcohol markers, and only after having drawn the void of space remembered that ink seeps through paper...
Also wanted to switch it up and try using my Polish rollerball pen!
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nerdyqueerandjewish · 8 months ago
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My fountain pen ran out of ink while I was Out and About today and I had to use a normal ballpoint pen and it was wretched. So much pressure is required to write anything
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lettering-is-my-music · 2 years ago
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so! this is the first pen I've made since August. I made it for my stepsister for her birthday. the pen has cruelty free diamonds infused in the resin. I made a tenon and inlaid the white color part on the cap with mica powder, more diamond dust, and flakes of sterling silver
it's been a while but for what it's worth I'm proud of me. I've been struggling to get the motivation to turn on my lathe after getting my MS diagnosis but I did it!
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stergeon · 8 months ago
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On fountain pens and cursive:
Fountain pens slap. However, I dislike pencil strongly but also make too many mistakes for pen, so I am locked into erasable inks only. So it’s gel pens for me forever I guess! I write in either print or cursive depending, but I find most people my age or younger (I’m in my early 20s) just can’t read cursive. Hilariously, this means I do most of my writing printed but I write poetry and rants and journal entries in cursive.
I also use cursive to take meeting minutes when the meeting people are older than me because there’s like a 50/50 chance it impresses them lol.
shaking your hand 🤝 fountain pen gang!!
i’m a mechanical pencil guy on the rare occasions where i’m 1. handwriting and 2. Not writing in pen. but i always respect the og #2. i’m just a little neurotic about keeping a pencil perfectly sharp and a mechanical one solves that problem lol.
tbh using cursive Tactically is a big brain move and i respect that immensely. i’ve drawn comics for a long time and before i picked up fountain pens, said comics were the only reason i remembered how to write in cursive lol. it’s kind of a shame that more people can’t read it these days but hey, if it makes it a makeshift form of code, that’s pretty neat 😈
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sinrevi-art · 11 months ago
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Barry from Pokémon. ~photo version below~
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I used a Pilot V-Ball 0.5 to draw this.
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ihearthes · 1 year ago
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maggiemaydraw · 2 years ago
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19/4/23. Building in Leominster Park. Rollerball pen. Thumbnail sketch.
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olameni · 2 years ago
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Retro 51 Tornado Macchiato Ombre rollerball pen.
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vera-dauriac · 11 months ago
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None of the fucking above. What sort of hell is this?
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If you aren’t choosing 5, you need help. 
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rosersmith · 6 days ago
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Parker Rollerball Refill
Explore the Luxor parker rollerball pen refill, which features a sleek appearance and smooth, effortless writing. It's ideal for adding a touch of elegance to your notes.
Address: Plot-229, Okhla, Phase-3, Delhi-110020 Phone: 0120- 4899100
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