Pen of the Day: Lamy 2000

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Lamy 2000 with fine nib. You know how sometimes you have a pen that just fits you perfectly? You might overlook it for flashier pens, but whenever you use it, you think, I could have this as my only pen. The Lamy 2000 with fine nib is that pen for me, combining gorgeous modern style with a nib I love to use.

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And I don’t know if this ever happens to anyone else, but I found such a perfect-for-me ink match that more than half the time I use this pen with one particular ink — J. Herbin Vert Empire.

Vert Empire is my favorite green ink, and since I just got a new bottle yesterday, I pulled out the Lamy 2000. Vert Empire shades beautifully. The gray-green color is soft and sophisticated, but still easy to read. It is a special ink. I am so happy to have it back, and back in this pen.

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Pen of the Day: Parker 51 Double Jewel

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Parker 51 Cedar Blue with fine nib. This is a vacumatic 51. It belonged to my mother. When we found it this January, it hadn’t been used for decades. It was inside an old jewelry box, unseen and forgotten. The body jewel and tassie were missing, and I didn’t have to test the filler to know it needed a new diaphragm.

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Pen of the Day: Pelikan M101N Lizard

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Pelikan M101N Lizard with medium nib. This pen is a special edition that I think doesn’t get enough attention. It has two tortoise brethren, which are also quite nice. But this is the one for me. I mean, lizard! And a sleek black. And a few sparkly bits in the binde.

Always remember that I am a complete sucker for “ooh shiny.”

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It’s a gorgeous design, a modern updating of the 101N brown lizard models from the 1930s. Look at the beautiful curves of the clip, and the Pelikan Germany engraving on the cap top — those and other details quote the original 101N.

The original models were all quite small, compared to most modern pens, and the M101N Lizard is as well. That’s the only thing that I would mention as a caution, though the pen can be used posted. The nib is wonderful and has a bit of softness, unlike most modern Pelikan nibs.

The ink is Diamine Shimmering Shadows. As my friend said, I’m sort of cheating with this Pen of the Day: I used it last week and have kept it inked. But can you blame me? Fantastic pen, fantastic ink. Plus, ooh, shiny.

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Pen of the Day: Lamy Vista

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Lamy Vista with extra-fine nib. This is the demonstrator version of the Safari. I use an extra-fine nib by far the most of any nib on my Lamy pens. It’s the best size for my cramped writing.

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Despite my love for Safari pens, I resisted the Vista for years. Having a converter in a demonstrator pen seemed to defeat the purpose. But the minute I actually saw one, my opinion turned around. The converter only enhances the industrial syle of the pen, and I really like seeing it in there. Bonus points for the red knob.

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The ink is Waterman Purple, since this is, after all, purple week. It’s a nice, easy-to-read purple color. I’ve actually used it a lot this week to mark up documents, and the combination of pen and ink has been perfect for that. Purple has been good luck, as promised.

Pen of the Day: Lamy Al-Star Purple

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Lamy Al-Star Purple with fine nib. I’m still focusing on purple. This is Lamy’s idea of a purple pen, which is more my idea of a deep burgundy, but it’s a nice color. Sometimes we just have to roll with it.

I think the aluminum body of this Al-Star looks great with the silver clip.

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The ink is Sailor Kobe #32 Tamon Purple Grey. I really love this ink. Does it match the pen? Maybe not exactly. But sometimes we just have to roll with it.

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Pen of the Day: Montblanc Writers Edition F. Scott Fitzgerald

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Montblanc Writers Edition F. Scott Fitzgerald with fine nib.  I do own pens with bling.  This one, for instance.  I occasionally think about selling it, to pay for some other pens I’ve bought.  But then I use it, and immediately think, no,  I love this pen.

The Fitzgerald is filled with a Montblanc limited edition ink from a few years ago, Montblanc Albert Einstein ink. This is a gray that is so dark it can almost look black.  I love this ink, too. Using it actually rekindled my interest in black inks.

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The pen is more glamorous.  Its black, white and silver color scheme, its materials and its details pay homage to Art Deco style and to Fitzgerald’s Jazz Age.  It would look at home on the set of an Astaire and Rogers film.  And it’s a wonderful writer: the Fitzgerald is lightweight and comfortable, and mine has a superb, albeit wide, fine nib.

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I really love it, though, because it is the F. Scott Fitzgerald pen. Fitzgerald is a favorite of mine. Sadly, he died relatively young, with his career in shambles and his body of work uneven.  In his twenties, he had written a great American novel.  In his forties he died in reduced circumstances, separated from his wife and estranged from many of his former friends, thinking himself a failure.

On his and Zelda’s tombstone is engraved his famous final sentence from The Great Gatsby:  “So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.”  But in the novel, immediately before those words came these, of hope:  “Gatsby believed in the green light, the orgiastic future that year by year recedes before us.  It eluded us then, but that’s no matter — tomorrow we run faster, stretch out our arms farther…. And one fine morning —”

The dreamer’s eternal hope always was the other side of Fitzgerald’s vision. I think that’s the quality that endears him to us still, despite knowing that no matter how fast he himself ran, his talent could not outrun his demons.

Pen of the Day: Sailor Desk Pen

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Sailor Desk Pen. This is another sub-$15 plastic desk pen featuring an ultra-fine Japanese nib.  I’ve got it filled with Sailor’s pigment-based ink, the nano ink Kiwa-guro.  The combination is very similar to the Platinum Carbon Desk Pen featured Tuesday.

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Sailor’s stainless steel nib is marked extra-fine.  I find it very similar in width to both the Platinum desk pen with Carbon Black and the Pilot Prera fine nib with Pilot Black (a regular dye-based ink).  The two desk pens may write slightly thinner lines than the Prera with fine nib, but all three are pretty close in my real world use.

Sailor Kiwa-guro ink is made from pigments rather than dye, so it’s similar to Platinum Carbon ink.  In the desk pens, Kiwa-guro is darker and blacker than Platinum Carbon ink.  However, Kiwa-guro is only water-resistant, while Platinum Carbon ink is totally waterproof.

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Pen of the Day: Platinum Carbon Desk Pen

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Platinum Carbon Desk Pen. This is an inexpensive plastic desk pen made by Platinum for its Carbon Black ink. I bought this, and a similar desk pen made by Sailor, years ago for drawing. I decided to take them out again this week for writing.

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The Platinum desk pen has a nice, smooth nib, and I like the pen’s light weight, long length and good balance.  It can take a Platinum converter if you want to use bottled ink. It’s a good pen to write with, for me.  Platinum describes the nib as “super fine.” It may be slightly thinner than my Pilot Prera fine nib with Pilot black ink, but I really think the two are comparable.

Platinum Carbon ink is marked safe for fountain pens, but I have had some difficulties with pigment inks over the years, so I honestly prefer to use them in dedicated cheaper pens, like this one.  Carbon Black is a waterproof and lightproof pigment-based ink.  It’s reputed to be a very dark black ink, but in this pen I don’t get that.  It writes smoothly and dries quickly. This combination easily could be an everyday user.

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