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In this episode, I talk about fountain pens for kids, how brush pens work, and what really gives a fountain pen its soul!
This week:
- Goulet 50k giveaway, close to 700 entries! Wow! Big shoutout for Colin
- Top 5 Fountain Pens for Newbies, FP 101, Top Shading Inks, Next Level Pens
- Winner....Stephanie Griffith! "My favorite youtube video is the Atlanta Pen Show 2016 Recap. I was honored enough to meet the Goulets at the pen show and I make a minor cameo in this video! It was so great to hang out with fellow fountain pen enthusiasts and meet some of the awesome people I have met through social media!"
- Slowed down a bit
- Katy came back!
New/Upcoming Products: - (7:15)
- Pelikan m400 Tortoise Shell- Brown
- Slow week for new product launches
- Physical inventory
- Blog on doing ink washes
- new Parker IM and Urban pens coming out! Check out our blog
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- Changing nib, slimming body, centerband, finial, new colors and patterns
- Urban $60-88 range
- IM $44-76 range
- we’re gathering interest
- previously only medium, now also in fine!
Pens/Writing - (9:34)
1) Ramananda R.- Facebook - (9:36)
Can nibs be made with anything other than metals?
- CAN they? Sure, but not often are they
- metal is durable and malleable enough to work with
- There are glass pens
- There are wood/bamboo/reed pens (that artists use)
- feathers (quills)
- really any natural material can be a nib, it'll just look really different than metal ones
2) Lisa R.- Facebook - (13:51)
I'm deployed and don't want to have a treasured fountain pen with me, and can't keep bottled ink easily. What is your favorite pen that accepts standard cartridges which isn't too expensive?
- thank you for your service!
- I'm assuming standard here means Standard International
- you can get cartridges for any C/C pen, though a lot are proprietary, so be aware
- SI might be easier to get abroad, depending where you are (esp Europe)
- Jinhao x450/750 - cheap and durable
- Nemosine Singularity - $20, good nib ranges, maybe a bit delicate though
- Kaweco Sport
- Faber-Castell Loom
- Karas Kustoms or Tactile Turn for sure
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- not super cheap, but really durable, American made, take SI carts
- Schrade Tactical pen (I don't sell it, but I hear good things)
3) otaku.crafts- Instagram - (19:15)
What do you think about fountain pens designed for kids like the Lamy ABC, pelikan happy pen or bruynzeel my grip.
- I'm actually a fan of them
- my experience with kid pens has been that they actually perform great, very smooth and durable nibs
- usually only one nib size though, around a medium
- often are pretty bright, colorful, and odd-shaped (look like kid pens)
- they don't sell well for us AT ALL, so we don't carry most of them
- I think they're worth a look, especially for kids
What exactly is a fountain pen? By that I mean, If I have a fine, black metropolitan with black ink and a medium, green metropolitan with green ink and switch which body is screwed onto each section...did I just change the ink color in my pens? If I clean the nibs and feeds and only swap converters did I? What if I keep the sections, converters and bodies but swap out nibs and feeds? In short, is there a piece you feel gives each pen its identity?
- ahhh...a deep question here!
- what makes a fountain pen is a complete pen
- the nib (and feed) is definitely the soul of the fountain pen, that's what it's really all built around
- the body of the pen really distinguishes it too, especially with SE/LE's
- it's really the complete pen that makes it a pen
- observing how they're manufactured, it's all just parts until the pen is completely assembled, so if you swap a part out, it's really still that same pen just with a new part (even the nib)
- so while the nib is really the working end of the pen, the body of the pen is really more what I would say is the thing that really makes it "that pen"
Ink - (28:03)
5) Kate P.- Facebook - (28:07)
I have a theory that waterproof inks dry out in pens faster than non-waterproof inks. What say you?
- that's somewhat of a generalization, true
- it really depends, there are plenty of non-waterproof inks that can be dry
- there are a couple of categories of waterproof inks:
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- iron gall
- cellulose-reactive (Noodler's)
- pigmented inks
- it definitely does depend on the ink, ones like the Noodler's Black Eel are lubricated and don't dry out easily
- as a general rule, I would say that you should exercise more diligence when using/maintaining pens with waterproof inks in them
6) Jocelyn S.- Facebook - (34:01)
When my hands are stained but dry the ink doesn't seem to rub off on things like white door jams or other things I've touched that would be a shame to stain by accident. Can getting my hands wet by washing or sweating cause old ink spots on my fingers to stain things I touch?
- I've found that this can be the case with fresh ink on your hands, that if it's dried but you haven't yet washed your hands, sweat can make it rub off
- if you have washed your hands (just with normal soap) you shouldn't have that problem
- you might still see ink on your fingers, but it won't be nearly as likely to rub off due to sweat (under normal circumstances)
- as a practice, when I get a lot of ink on my fingers, I do a simple hand washing, and then don't even think about it from there
7) SteVen F.- Facebook - (37:41)
Is it only direct sunlight that causes ink to degrade? I have a relatively dim light bulb in my room, and I have my bottled inks displayed on my shelf. The curtains on my windows are dark, thick, and don't really let much sunlight in at all. Is light from a low wattage incandescent bulb safe for my inks? Or should I only keep them in their boxes/in a drawer?
- so it's the UV rays in the sunlight that degrade the ink dyes, and direct sunlight affects it the most
- to a degree, indirect sunlight can degrade it too, though slower
- the amount of UV exposure from a lightbulb is much lower than direct sunlight
- fluorescent and halogen lights emit a higher UV exposure
- incandescent light emits much less, so little you probably don't even need to worry about it
- same goes for LED
- So if you keep it out and exposed to direct sunlight or bright fluorescents, that's not ideal for archiving your inks
- other light may be okay, but if you want it to really last the longest, keep it in the box
QOTW: What age were you when you used your first fountain pen? - (46:19)
Thanks so much for joining us this week! You can catch up on any old Q&A videos you missed here.
Write On,
Brian Goulet
Thanks so much for joining us this week! You can catch up on any old Q&A videos you missed here.
Write On,
Brian Goulet