pens and paper
pens and paper
a very boring thread.
sort of in love with these twsbi fountain pens - they look clunky and even a little bit cheap in photos but in practice they work very beautifully, can't recommend more highly for anyone looking to get an affordable fountain pen. it's a piston system so it gets ink from bottle, but i've found you can write like 10 pages or so with one fill. ink is robert oestler lake of fire fwiw.
sort of in love with these twsbi fountain pens - they look clunky and even a little bit cheap in photos but in practice they work very beautifully, can't recommend more highly for anyone looking to get an affordable fountain pen. it's a piston system so it gets ink from bottle, but i've found you can write like 10 pages or so with one fill. ink is robert oestler lake of fire fwiw.
My crusty morning eyes first read the thread title as 'penis and power'. That is all.
Are u guys trying to make Sally leave again
Pilot G2 is my go-to. Never used a fountain pen. Looks messy
Pilot G2 is my go-to. Never used a fountain pen. Looks messy
eh? i have no problem with either pens or greennui's crusty visions, but can only mourn the sad sensuality of my own handwriting that i can barely read anymore. i'm left-handed so prone to continual smudges and stains as well, but still persist with fountain pens of generic & no name brand because it's just so nice to write with such softly flowing ink.
wonder how many generations we are away from stopping writing at all
someone must have written some nice essays on handwriting etc????
wonder how many generations we are away from stopping writing at all
someone must have written some nice essays on handwriting etc????
also left handed and oddly find myself smearing less with fountain pen ink than with gel pens, those pilot g2 pens are alright but in the few years i used them i legitimately thought i'd die young not from all the femmes femmes hedonism but from the steady ink absorbtion on my left wrist.
always interesting to me that friends who've grown up in other countries learned to write with fountain pens, i don't think i'd ever even seen one until i was in my late 20s.
always interesting to me that friends who've grown up in other countries learned to write with fountain pens, i don't think i'd ever even seen one until i was in my late 20s.
Left-handed champs, unite! That's some nice handwriting. I have not touched a fancy a fancy pen since high school.
In grade one we got a new teacher in like March all of a sudden. First day, she sits us down. She asks us a question: "which fruit can you write with?" Nobody says anything. Nobody knows. She prods us. Cajoles us to throw out guesses. Nobody dares. I don't think any of us had any clue. Finally, she tells us. Big smile on her face. "A ballpoint banana!"
One of the more fucked experiences of my life
One of the more fucked experiences of my life
We had to write our homework and exams with this type of pen, called a 'stylo' in french. The pen took cartilages like these: I've had many of these cartilages explode or leak on my hand or clothes.
I remember we were forced to use this kind of pen early on. In the final year or two of high school, we used the more practical and less romantic disposable Bic pen
weirdly i've never had any issues with those cartridges, but have seen traumatic accidents with the bic disposable pens. both with young men in high school who chewed them, and had the ink explode in their mouth, causing them to go running to the bathroom with dark blue liquid streaming from their mouth like some kind of cheap horror movie effect.
i get confused by what age high school means so. up until 11 all us kids wrote with these, and they had they most satisfyingly chewable lids and ends
then on age 11 my parents proudly presented me with a fairly expensive parker fountain pen, which i promptly broke. but continued with similar ones after that. interspersed with the odd emergency bic (biros to me). but as far as i can remember the school didn't give a toss which pen we used although they drew the line at pencil.
a banana ballpoint?? i hope you at least got a novelty rubber out of that class. (do you call them rubbers? erasers?)
then on age 11 my parents proudly presented me with a fairly expensive parker fountain pen, which i promptly broke. but continued with similar ones after that. interspersed with the odd emergency bic (biros to me). but as far as i can remember the school didn't give a toss which pen we used although they drew the line at pencil.
a banana ballpoint?? i hope you at least got a novelty rubber out of that class. (do you call them rubbers? erasers?)
rubbers are condoms in ustwodeadmagpies wrote: ↑Sat Feb 06, 2021 7:48 pm novelty rubber out of that class. (do you call them rubbers? erasers?)
of course they are, sorry! there's a disciplinary complaint waiting to happen with a british supply teacher LOL
ohhh we should do a handwriting thread (or just hijack this one, with nrh’s permission)! handwriting seems to say so much about a person; and strangely, the handwriting above seems like nrh... (ofc now it won’t turn out to be nrh’s handwriting, and i’ll have made yet another post that i’ll live to regret)
in uni i just used these erasable bad boys, for editing purposes...
...since uni i have not been handwriting anymore, as i am a toddler
...since uni i have not been handwriting anymore, as i am a toddler
faintly astonished to discover that dickens does his g's like i do. i picked it up from a physics teacher but now wondering if it's just an old-fashioned way of doing it
https://twitter.com/BCDreyer/status/1358451560636948481
https://twitter.com/BCDreyer/status/1358451560636948481
- Holdrüholoheuho
- Posts: 3197
- Joined: Sat Sep 05, 2020 12:30 am
- Location: Prague, Bohemia
the main reason my cinephilia is currently on the decline is as follows.
fontstruct, i.e. the other online playground of mine (i already mentioned it in another thread), recently introduced colors.
https://twitter.com/FontStruct/status/1 ... 80577?s=20
and since then i am obsessively making various colorful versions of my digital "handwriting" (and hardly watch any movies).
however, as we know, the nature of all the manias (or addictions) is they can't be nurtured infinitely (without cessation).
so, i expect my current passion for making colorful alphabets will fade away with time (and at one point my cinephilia will undergo a glorious revival).
fontstruct, i.e. the other online playground of mine (i already mentioned it in another thread), recently introduced colors.
https://twitter.com/FontStruct/status/1 ... 80577?s=20
and since then i am obsessively making various colorful versions of my digital "handwriting" (and hardly watch any movies).
however, as we know, the nature of all the manias (or addictions) is they can't be nurtured infinitely (without cessation).
so, i expect my current passion for making colorful alphabets will fade away with time (and at one point my cinephilia will undergo a glorious revival).
- Otello Cagliostro
- Posts: 33
- Joined: Mon Mar 22, 2021 8:55 am
Same for me also did my school years in france, might buy one back the "stylo plume" has a really nice feeling of smoothness the Japanese Muji pen is really great and apparently world renownedkanafani wrote: ↑Sat Feb 06, 2021 7:23 pmWe had to write our homework and exams with this type of pen, called a 'stylo' in french.
-stylo-plume-parker-35-milleraies-argent-800.jpg
The pen took cartilages like these:
56ff99b8b3970b30d525ec2a-large.jpg
I've had many of these cartilages explode or leak on my hand or clothes.
I remember we were forced to use this kind of pen early on. In the final year or two of high school, we used the more practical and less romantic disposable Bic pen