27 December 2010

In Which I Experience Fine German Engineering (No, Dad, Not That)

While sitting in Germany waiting for my plane to Iraq, I ordered a fountain pen online, the Lamy Safari Charcoal with a Medium nib. I have a couple of vintage pens, a Parker 51 and a little Esterbrook of some kind, but I didn't want to subject them to the abuse and possible loss that is part of the mobile military lifestyle. So I ordered the Lamy. I actually tried to get one in Mississippi, but the one pen shop I found in the phone book had recently shut down, leaving me to find it on the internet.

I've been using it for a month or so now, mostly for letter writing. It doesn't agree very much with the paper in my journal, which is lightly ridged and tends to snag the pen. But for letter writing it is pretty nice. It is nice and thick, which for me is good because holding on to smaller pens makes my hands cramp up. It puts down a decent line with the standard Lamy ink cartridges, although the ink seems a bit watery and light and the line tends to become drier as I write. I would be interested to see how it does with some different inks with more pigment to them. Overall I am pretty happy with the pen. It serves it's purpose, and for a chunky plastic low-end model it looks pretty good, fits well in the hand, and writes fairly well. I haven't had any issues with leaks or anything although I think the leaky fountain pen is more myth than reality, especially when it comes to modern models.

4 comments:

  1. I have my Grandpa's fountain pen that I use to sign certificates and awards. You may be interested in it some day.

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  2. Of course, you probably already know about my pen and this is all a ploy to make it your own.

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  3. I recall finding a fountain pen in your desk drawer many years ago (I believe it was a Parker of some kind, though I can't be sure), but I wasn't aware that you had one currently in service.

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  4. ah, the lure of the fancy office supplies!

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