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The Fountain Pen Thread

Discussion in 'The Off Topic Room' started by Andrew, Feb 16, 2014.

  1. Christopher

    Christopher Founding Member

    That would be a stub, italic, oblique or any nib that is wider than it is tall. I have a 1.1 stub that I like a lot. They make different size nibs, and you can even get one custom made, or massage a stock nib to whatever you like.
     
  2. James

    James smarter then your average duck Founding Member Gold Contributor

    Italic or stub, you depending on the pen you may have to have someone grind that for you. A stub is a halfway point, will give you the look while still being smooth, but not as crsip lines. A cursive italic has sharp corners if you use to much pressure or dont have the angle down the edges can catch, but it looks way more crisp in the line differences
     
  3. Brianw

    Brianw The Dark Net Mastermind Founding Member

    You've come a long way James
     
  4. Jim

    Jim Old Curmudgeon Founding Member

  5. Jim

    Jim Old Curmudgeon Founding Member

  6. MattS

    MattS Founding Member

    You guys are killing me. I am going to have to start selling some knives to get some of these beauties.
     
  7. James

    James smarter then your average duck Founding Member Gold Contributor

    That may be very convenient lol
     
  8. James

    James smarter then your average duck Founding Member Gold Contributor

    Well when you have good teachers who take the time to teach someone right, its easy to really get into something. A feeling im having all over again at the moment lol, luckily I dont need as many knives as pens
     
  9. Christopher

    Christopher Founding Member

    LOL, don't be so sure of that. I bet you didn't think you needed as many pens as you have now either. :)
     
  10. James

    James smarter then your average duck Founding Member Gold Contributor

    I dont have that many pens, not like them other two, I cant lose a box of pens amd not realize it finding it months or years later forgetting they even existed or anything lol I maybe have ten 6 in rotation
     
  11. Christopher

    Christopher Founding Member

    That's true, you have been pretty good at getting some good pens and not letting it get out of control. Now, that other guy, who needs this to transport his collection.....not so much :p

    24.jpg
     
  12. John Fout

    John Fout Founding Member

    Bravo James.
     
  13. Andrew

    Andrew Have Pen Will Travel Founding Member

    How many?

    So this image illustrates the difference in specialty nib grinds. It's from the Franklin-Christoph website... worth a look.

    NibGrinds.jpg
     
  14. Andrew

    Andrew Have Pen Will Travel Founding Member

    I just got these four Sheaffers back from Danny Fudge. He did a nice job getting them back into working order, and the turnaround time was lightening fast. These are all old family pens. On was my dad's and one was my aunt's. Both of those (the burgundy pens) are engraved with their names.

    P1100669.JPG P1100671.JPG P1100673.JPG
     
  15. XooMG

    XooMG Founding Member

    The burgundy with the triumph nib is one of those pens I've wanted to try for a while, but I was underwhelmed by the two old Scheaffers I had and lost the motivation to keep looking around.
     
  16. John Fout

    John Fout Founding Member

    I loved my diamond shaped triumph nib before it started leaking... This is all pre-Pelikan days so I probably wouldn't like it now. :)
     
  17. Andrew

    Andrew Have Pen Will Travel Founding Member

    The nib on the black snorkel is a little loud/rough. It just needs tweaking and smoothing. The other three are really nice to use as they are.
     
  18. MattS

    MattS Founding Member

    If I were to take a fountain pen to my belt sander at say a 600 grit until the width of the nib was the desired size would I be able to create a reasonable classic italic nib......to make a cursive italic would I just bevel and blend the edges, or am I over simplifying this? Is there a magical heat treat or temper I run the risk of screwing up if I experiment on some cheapies?
     
  19. John Fout

    John Fout Founding Member

    Practice on some cheap nibs and find out. The work after grinding is the trick, get some Knox nibs or something
     
  20. Andrew

    Andrew Have Pen Will Travel Founding Member

    You can read up on grinding nibs here and here. I would definitely start by practicing on some broad Knox nibs set in something like a Jinhao X750 fountain pen. Those pens are cheap, but Knox nibs are $9 each. I think 600 grit would destroy a nib almost immediately. I'd go slowly with lapping film instead. If you work with sandpaper at all, I'd go with a 2000 grit wet/dry to start, then move to lapping film. Nibs work down pretty quickly, and you need to go very slowly. It's good to dip the nib in ink and write often as you grind so you can see and feel what you're doing to the nib.
     

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