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Episode: 2273
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Title: HPR2273: Fountain Pens
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2273/hpr2273.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 00:42:46
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---
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This is HPR episode 2,273 entitled Fountain Pen.
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It is hosted by M1RAR Nero R5H4D35 and is about 23 minutes long and currently an exquisite
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flag.
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The summary is in this episode, I cover some of the basics on Fountain Pen.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by An Honest Host.com.
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It 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15, that's HPR15.
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Hello world, you're listening to Hacker Public Radio and I, Mayor Shades, and today I'm
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going to talk about Fountain Pens.
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What?
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Yeah, I want to talk about Fountain Pens and I'm not the first person to actually bring
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this up on HPR.
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It's been mentioned before by Dave Morris and Drupes, I know both either mention them or
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have done shows about them, but yeah, I am very much into technology, but there are certain
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pieces of older technology that I just find so fascinating, so as into technology as
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I am, I still very much like to write on paper.
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I don't know why, I'm sure I'm not the only one like that, I have a bunch of notebooks,
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a bunch of journals, there's something about the tactile sensation of writing and your
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thoughts, at least for me, seem to flow a little better when I can just scribble them down
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in a notebook.
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So all that aside, why use a Fountain Pen and what is it, it's sort of the precursor
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to modern ballpoint pens, so Fountain Pens used to be very common in the US and pretty
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much throughout the world, they're still, you still see them probably more often than
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anything, but they are an older technology.
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I know, excuse me, in Dave's episode, he went over some of the parts of a Fountain Pen,
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I'm going to just real briefly rehash just for the sake of brevity, so you don't have
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to look around a bunch of different places, but there are besides here, there's also a
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ton of YouTube videos out there that will go over all the parts, and if you actually just
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Google parts of a Fountain Pen and look at the images, there's actually diagrams, I'll
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see if I can find one of those to attach to the show notes, don't quote me on that, I
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may not be able to, but at any rate, there's some parts that you would recognize from any
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pen, the body or the barrel, the cap, the clip, there's some other parts that you may not
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be as familiar with, the ends of the pen are usually referred to as the finial, and on
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some pins and the finial, the manufacturer will put, I don't know how to describe it, it's
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like a little disc or a button, it's almost like a maker's mark, it just identifies the manufacturer
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of the pen, there's also the section, and the section is kind of the part that you hold
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with your fingers, and attach to the section will be the feed, the nib, and whatever type
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of reservoir the pen uses, so I'll talk about that a little bit more in a minute, so basically
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the mechanism for how this works, in the past it has been described as a controlled
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week, so you have some kind of reservoir in the back that holds all the ink, and it runs
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down the feed and is sort of delivered to the nib, which is the metal part that touches
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the paper, and just as an aside here, when you write with a fountain pen, you have to kind
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of keep them in the same, you can't really twist it in your hand like you do a ballpoint,
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you have to keep the shiny part of the nib upright, so doing that, I find, it does force
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me to slow down just a little bit, but that's a good thing, it helps me to write a little
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planer and a little clearer, I'll talk a little bit more about handwriting towards the end
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of this episode, because I know a lot of times people talk about fountain pens, they also
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talk about wanting to improve their handwriting, so we'll get to that a little bit later,
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now like many other kinds of technology, fountain pens are moderately hackable, and there
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are some things you can do to a fountain pen, I'll get into some of that in a minute, so
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when we talk about some of the specifics of the individual parts, so when we're talking
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about the reservoir a minute ago, there's different kinds, some of them are piston fillers,
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some of them are vacuum fillers, some of them use cartridges or converters, and there's
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generally a couple of different kinds, and most all converters are piston type converters
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that plug in where a cartridge would go, basically what converters allow you to do is a pen that
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is designed to work with an ink cartridge, instead of buying the cartridges you can buy
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the ink in a bottle, and then use the converter to fill the pen, rather than having to buy
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a bunch of cartridges and use them, the cartridges are kind of expensive, actually, it's cheaper
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to buy it by the bottle, you get a lot more ink for a lot less money, piston fillers and
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vacuum type fillers are, most of the piston fillers I think that I've seen out there generally
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use the entire body of the pen as the reservoir, so you pull up a piston and that evacuates
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all the air and the chamber, and then you dip the nib and feed into a bottle of ink and
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then push the piston down, and that creates a vacuum and sucks a whole bunch of ink up inside
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the pen, most of the vacuum type non-piston ones, you know I don't see this too much on modern pens
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anymore, a lot of older pens, I have an old Esther Brook pen that has this type of, it's like a
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rubber bladder inside the pen, and it's got a little lever on the side, and when you pull the lever
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up, it depresses that bladder, and then when you dip the pen in the ink and then when you release
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the lever, it releases the bladder and creates kind of a vacuum and sucks a little bit of ink up
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in there, it doesn't really work that good, it works okay, it doesn't suck up a whole lot of ink
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like you would expect it to, at least it's not been my experience, it doesn't work as well as
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say a piston filler, most of your cartridge based, this is the most common, most fountain pens are
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generally designed to work with ink cartridges, and the converters, you know I've had various levels
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of success, they do their job, generally sometimes I have on some pens, they have trouble sometimes
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wanting to actually get the ink flow going through, but once it's, once you start getting the ink
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through, it's not that hard to fill them, I said there's a couple of different kinds of converters
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because they're some that just pop on like the cartridges do, and then there's some that are
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designed where they actually have threads, so you have to actually screw the converter into the
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section, those are kind of nice, they keep the the converter on there pretty secure,
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so a bit about the cartridges, so for the most part, most of your pens out there are going to use
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what's called international shorts, they're these kind of a standardized cartridge, it's the most
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common, most pens will accept them, however there are some pens by some manufacturers that
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are designed to work with only their ink cartridges, their proprietary cartridges,
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Schiefer is a company that does this, Parker is a company that does this, I think Pilot does it,
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maybe Waterman, and I can't remember, I think Waterman does it, but that being said,
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a vast majority of them are just designed to use with your standard international shorts,
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most ink companies sell cartridges in international shorts, so
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also some pens can be, you can do what's called the idriper conversion on them, and basically
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you take a regular fountain pen that's designed to use, either cartridge or converter,
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and you can, depending on the type of the way it's designed, you can put a gasket and some
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grease on there, and essentially use the whole body of the pen as the reservoir,
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some people are really into that, doing, you know, modifying that way, I generally don't
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modify my pens that much, there's also some modifications you can do to the nibs, so I'm going to
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talk about the nibs next, the nib is the actual metal part that comes in contact with the paper,
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it's got a split down the metal and creates two halves, and those are called the tines,
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like on fork, it does end in kind of a little ball or blob that allows the, the nib to move smoothly
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across the paper, the generally most companies will make nibs in several different sizes,
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a lot of them will come in extra fine fine medium broad extra broad, and some won't even make
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triple broad, I don't know if there's an extra extra fine, I've not seen those, but I haven't
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really seen too many triple broads either, I know they're out there, but I've not actually seen them,
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and there's no real standard on that either, I'm just going to go out and say it, I have pens that are
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like mediums that are really more like a broad, and then I have some that are mediums that are
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what you would expect a medium to be, and then it's kind of all over the place, generally I would say
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if it's a more inexpensive pen, it's probably a lot of times they're just sold with a sort of generic
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medium nib, and usually that medium is more like a, I guess, a European broad.
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That being said, some, not all, but a good portion of fountain pens, the nib and feed can be
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removed from the section, and in some cases you can swap those, most of the nibs I've seen
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on ones that are removable are fairly interchangeable, a good way to tell if you want to swap a nib
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in one pen to another pen is look at their feeds, if the feeds on the bottom are more or less identical,
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and they probably will be, they'll be very obvious, okay, if they are, then there's a good chance
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that the nib and the feed will interchange between those two pens, I actually had to do this on a pen
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of mine, I bought, it's the most expensive pen I own, which isn't saying much, most of my pens are
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just cheapos, but I have a Monteverde Invincia Stealth, and this is normally like a $70 pen, I caught
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it on sale for $45 or $42 or something like that, I really, really wanted it, so I went ahead and
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picked it up, and it had a lot of issues getting it to, to write correctly, and I even sent it back
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to the pen to see, had been looked at it, and they couldn't find anything wrong with it, but it
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just did not want to write very good, and I suspected there was a problem with the feed, and I
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turned it over and looked at it, and so I'm going to tell you a dirty little secret of the pen world is
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that, even on many of the very expensive pens, the feeds on them are the exact same feeds that you'll
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find on cheap pens, I suspect they all come out of the same factory somewhere, and probably South
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East Asia, they're probably just, they're just little injection-molded pieces of plastic, so
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no real shock that they're identical, but I swapped it out with the feed from a cheaper pen,
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and now it writes just fine, so I definitely think the feed was the problem, but now I have no
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feed for the other pen, so I'm going to have to probably track down or buy another one,
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not that big a deal, they're not very expensive, but you can also, besides swapping them out and
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changing them, some people will do, they'll grind the nib, you can kind of put a grind on a nib
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to smooth it out or modify it to your own handwriting, there's actually, I wouldn't really recommend
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doing this, just maybe a minor quick sanding or something to smooth it out, if it's kind of rough
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or scratchy, because there's actually an entire art form behind nib grinding, and you really,
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you have to find one of these, like, why forget what they're called, like nib masters or something,
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that seriously, that's what they're called, and they have years of experience in grinding nibs,
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and they usually have to have a handwriting sample, so they can grind the nib to your style
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writing, but yeah, that's just another customization that can be done to a fountain pen.
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The, let's see, another thing I should probably mention is that there's different kinds of
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inks out there, fountain pen ink is water based, dip pens and fountain pens are not the same thing,
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do not ever try to fill your fountain pen with dip pen ink, dip pen ink is very bright,
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very opaque, and it also contains a bunch of shellaxe in it that are very bad for fountain pens,
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so avoid those, if the bottle doesn't say what kind of ink it is, I would avoid it for your fountain pen,
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I actually have dip pens too, I used to be, I used to practice calligraphy a lot,
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I was introduced to that at a very young age, so I kind of know what to look for, but
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yeah, just be aware, if you're buying ink for your fountain pen, if you go out and buy a fountain pen,
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make sure you get fountain pen ink for it, you can use fountain pen ink with a dip pen,
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but you cannot use dip pen ink in a fountain pen. Let's see, there's different levels of
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expense, like when it comes to fountain pens, and the cost is all over the place, the cheapest
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fountain pen I ever bought, brand new, was like $2.25, that was cheaper than a good ballpoint pen,
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the most expensive one, like I said, I paid $42 for it is typically a $70 pen, I don't even know,
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I shoulder to think what the most expensive fountain pen I've ever seen, if you go on Amazon and
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just do a search, and then sort them, sometimes you can find the ones that are made by jewelers,
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and they cost like $90,000, that's obviously ridiculous, but I can almost promise you that a $90,000
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fountain pen isn't going to write any better than a $100 fountain pen, generally when it comes down to
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around a $100 to $150 range is probably the highest in as far as actual performance, you're going to
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get some of the differences are in the resins that are used to make the pen itself, the types of
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metals that are used, some of the nibs, some of them are steel, some of them are made out of
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ridium, some of them are gold, and there's even titanium nibs out there now,
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I think most of mine are just steel or a ridium,
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but anyway, there's, I don't know, there are some expensive inks out there, I've seen
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some bottles of ink as high as almost $30 for a bottle, but your typical inks are going to run
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you about ten bucks for a bottle usually, I know private reserve makes a whole line of all kinds
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of different colors, they're very reasonable, reasonably priced anywhere from seven to ten bucks,
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and they're way cheaper than the cartridges, that's what a lot of people wind up using is private
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reserve, I think, but there are some noodleers makes ink, Monteverde makes ink, I don't know,
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there's a bunch of companies out there making ink, paper is another thing, so your
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the tactile sensation of writing is going to change drastically depending on the kind of paper
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you are trying to write on, some papers are very absorbent, and sometimes I've seen like very
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coarse and absorbent paper, something that's almost as coarse as construction paper, but not
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as thick, and it was very absorbent and ink just splotched all over, it was terrible, sometimes you
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see that with a very cheap notebook paper, I know sometimes the kind of notebook paper they sell
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and places like the dollar store or whatever it can be, it's okay with for a ballpoint pen to
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probably not your fountain pen, either you might have issues with ink bleed through or just splotching
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or it sometimes is kind of rough, it's kind of ragged paper, and you won't get the smoothest
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feeling writing on it, paper can get expensive too, you know if you're willing to buy
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there's several kinds of paper out there, I find the name of that company,
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of day or something like that, I can't remember where we are, and there's those
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mulliskin notebooks that people are real big on, but apparently the paper is real high grade for
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those and it lends itself to this phenomenon that people in the fountain pens refer to as
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it's like writing on glass, in other words it's an extremely smooth writing experience and
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that's what you want, but you know what, I don't always do that, I actually buy journals and so
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the quality of the paper and sometimes it's really good, sometimes it's not so good and I just
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wing it, I have a lot of like I said, a lot of inexpensive pens right now, I'm using a pen that
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cost me just under $5, and I'm using actually, I'm trying to use up some of this cheap ink that I
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have, it was black ink and I was like I've never heard of this before and I just bought it on
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because it was cheap and it's really not that bad, it gets the job done, it's not my favorite, but
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but yeah it works, I'll try to put some links in the show notes for some resources, there's a
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couple of guides on YouTube, I know there's the gulay pen company makes a lot of videos, they also
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have a store where they sell fountain pens and related stuff, but they also make like review videos
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of a lot of fountain pens and some instructional videos, there's a guy named Stephen Brown
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who does, he has, I think a couple of channels now to a three, I don't know, he has an absolute
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ton of fountain pen videos and they're very good, he does reviews of fountain pens, he does writing
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samples with them, and then there's also a guy, his channel is called the pen habit, and if you
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look up on YouTube the pen habit you can see his videos too, most of these are, you know there's
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going to be a lot of pen reviews, but there's also, you're going to pick up the stuff, the jargon
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and the parts of the pen and stuff, some of these guys are very serious about their pens,
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I, there's a couple of pens out there, I wanted and kind of missed the boat on, one of the pens
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that I really really wanted was an Edison callier, do yourself a favor and look that up, they
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actually still make that pen, but I wanted it in a specific color called steel marble which
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was absolutely gorgeous and I don't think they make that anymore sadly, anyway that's all for me.
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You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio dot org, we are a community
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