Showing posts with label Chelpark Moti. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chelpark Moti. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

I Got Green Pens Too!

I was rummaging through my pen wraps last night looking for a Hero when I realized something: several green pens are peeking out of their slots. Whoa. With six fountain pens and two gel pens, I seem to be getting them faster than those white pens I'm trying hard to build on to a collection. But I'm not complaining. Who knows I may just move on to green pens later when I get my fill of those whities. And these green pens remind me of the green Conway Stewart Dinkie pair I saw at Leigh Reyes' blog yesterday. My pens, are of course worlds different from Leigh's and from those in her collection. *Wink.*

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Green pens abound.

From left: Chelpark Moti (Fine, inked with Parker Quink Blue-Black); Inoxcrom Agatha Ruiz de la Prada (Extra Fine, uninked); Hero 332 (Fine to Medium, inked with Private Reserve Copper Burst); Youth 208 (Fine, just cleaned, I also got this in teal); MonAmi Gel Love Pets; Schneider 0.5 XTRA 892; M&G Joy Box (Fine, inked with Waterman South Sea Blue); and Schneider Zippi (Fine, inked with Schneider Black).

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Rediscovering Old Inks

After my first pen meet last December, I (surprisingly) started to have a dislike for black and blue-black inks as new ink colors began to interest me. At that time too, I had the luck of owning several bottles of new non-black/non-blue-black inks (Private Reserve Copper Burst and Avocado, and Waterman South Sea Blue and Florida Blue). And so the move to colored inks became a wonderful experience. And because of my exposure to fellow fountain pen collectors, I began to crave for more non-black inks to add into my stash. Who wouldn't be in awe when one sees colorful strokes of sepia-like brown, avocado green, turquiose-like blue, and almost royal blue inks on one's Moleskine's pages? For days, I rotated several pens inked with different colors on my Moleskine, who must have had a heart attack with all those hues after having been used to the monotony of black. But not for long.

Last month, during an international workshop sponsored by my organization, a friend from India brought me four pens: a Camlin Trinity, a Chelpark Moti, and two fancy Montex pens. I postponed inking the pens for a week as I was also very busy at that time. When the time came to ink it though, I took my chances and went back to my previous loves: Parker Quink washable black and permanent blue-black.

I used black on the Camlin Trinity and she was an instant hit with me. "We hit it off right away," is what I'll say if I am to describe my initial impression of the Camlin. I was so smitten by that pen that I temporarily ditched my two Schneider Base pens. She's got a Fine to Medium nib, but she is such a wet writer. She's got some scratch when I write with it though, but I want to think that such flaw adds to her character.

Here's the Camlin Trinity fountain pen with a Fine to Medium nib. Its maroon barrel is made of plastic, and brushed metal for its cap.

Note the unique clip of this pen.

This is the closest I can get to its nib.

And here is a writing sample of this beautiful pen.

For the Chelpark Moti I used the permanent blue-black ink. It wasn't a hit at first, but after some strokes and doodles on paper, she showed me what she's got. Like the Camlin, she's got a Fine to Medium nib, but she's wetter. And so she's smoother as a writer. Which is just wonderful. And while the Camlin fills through a converter, this one gets hers through a piston filling mechanism. Her nib and feed can also be removed so it's easier to clean. And she's got a window to show the ink inside. Cool.

Here's the Chelpark Moti fountain pen with a Fine to Medium nib. Its green barrel is made of plastic, and its brushed metal cap has some signs of brassing.

The cap and nib of the Moti. Her nib is more elaborate than the Camlin's. Note her ink window.

And here is a writing sample of my Chelpark Moti.

Now that I'm into Parker inks, I got myself a box of cartridges of Parker Quink Ruby. It's like burnt red, or red-purple, and I imagine seeing red wine droplets on my Moleskine pages when I write using this ink. I used it on my white Parker Vector as a tiny surprise for anyone who wants to try my white pen. This ink is beautiful, and the photo below cannot do its beauty justice.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Pens + Notebooks = Things New and Wonderful

I have new pens... *Grin.* And I got new notebooks... *Grin.*

I wrote about my upcoming pens in my 23 February post. I was so excited about the four pens that I wrote about them even before I got hold of them. The vintage pens came within the week, thanks to Sir Butch Dalisay's prompt mailing and to LBC's efficiency. Just in time before my Dusit Thani workshop the week after, where I learned that I won't have the Lamys, yet, which is sad. They're out of stock, and have been like that for the last three or four months, according to my friends from Malaysia who scoured the shops in KL for me. But they assured me they will send the pens as soon as they are available.

Then again, as the old saying goes, lose some, win some. Huh? *Grin.* No Lamys from KL, but I got new pens from India! Yipee-yey!!! The same afternoon I learned the sad news about the Lamys, I was at the lobby of Dusit Thani when my Indian friend B handed me a brown bag with four pens straight from New Delhi. Huwow!!! I got four new pens!!! They have separate boxes, complete with their own converters and two short ink cartridges. My gifts are two Montex fountain pens (pink and green), a green Chelpark Moti, and a red/maroon Camlin Trinity. The Montex pens have plastic nib protectors and their nibs are very unique. (The pink one went to someone else, of course.) The Chelpark and Camlin both have brushed silver caps and plastic barrels, but all pens write well, very smooth, and very wet! But that is how exactly I like my pens to be. I love broad, wet pens!

New pens. From left: Parker Vector (F) from NBS Glorietta; Vintage pens: Superior 330 (F), Lamy Ratio 47 (XF); Pens from India: Camlin Trinity (F), Chelpark Moti (F); Pens from Corona: Youth 208 (both F, the teal and green ones), Hero 332 (F-M), Hero 442 (F), Youlian (F); and Pens from Cardinal: Hero 330 (XF), and Wing Sung (F).

The same week, on a stroll at Glorietta after a full day's workshop session, I passed by NBS and saw a white Parker Vector. I had to get that pen! And get it I did, together with a box of Parker Quink Ruby cartridges. I rushed back to my hotel room and wrote a whole page letter with my new white pen inked with Ruby. Amazing! But oh, I forgot that I was supposed to get dinner at Superbowl on that stroll, too, but because it was getting late already, I went to Wendy's instead (which is just across the hotel) and got myself a chili con carne and bacon mushroom melt. Whoa.

Two weeks after, we went to Sta. Cruz, Manila to visit Escolta. On our way there, we missed the stop to Escolta and ended up in Recto. Raffy, a fellow fountain pen collector, helped us via text messaging to go around the area and scour those bookstores selling Youth, Hero, Pilot, Lamy, and Wing Sung pens. Lucky we missed the Escolta stop. Our first store was Corona, where I got five pens: Hero 332 and 442, two Youth 208s (green and teal), and a Youlian pen. They also have a couple of Lamys but I did not buy any when I saw the ugly ink stains on their nibs. Napangitan ako bigla. I also got myself a Waltex 3x folding magnifier for closeups of my pens' nibs and also for my stamps. A few steps further and we were at Cardinal (which sadly closed a week after we were there), where I got a brushed metal Wing Sung and a Hero 330, which is exactly a modern version of the vintage Superior 330 from Sir Butch. They also have Pilot Birdies, and several Parkers. Our last bookstore/pen store was Merriam across FEU, but I didn't get any of their Sheaffers because they were too pricey for me.

Earlier on, I got lucky to have two Paperchase journals from Booksale. Booksale people said these notebooks are limited, so I'm really lucky to have gotten hold of two. For fountain pen users like I am, it is important that the notebooks and paper we use are friendly to our pens and their inks. Luckily, the Paperchase notebooks are super fountain pen friendly! I wrote on it with my pens, beginning with the finest to the broadest, including my calligraphy pens, and there was no feathering at all! There were minor signs of bleed though, but that's expected with medium and broad nibs like the ones from my Rotring 600 (B) and Schneider Base (M). The paper is white, smooth, and ruled wider than that of my Moleskine's, but that's okay, too. I'd need that if I am to use my medium- and broad-nibbed pens.


My Paperchase notebooks: looks elegant with their black leather cover. Like Moleskines, they also have lovely bookmarkers.

The inside pages of the notebook: white, large-ruled, fountain pen-friendly!

And just last weekend, another strike of luck came by while I was browsing shops at SM, where I found this Eagle notebook at Office Warehouse, the same place where I get my Schneider pens. Again, it's fountain pen friendly, but the best thing about it is its wire binding. And it's got an elastic band too. This notebook comes in A5 and a bigger version which is best for sketching despite its ruled pages.

Eagle notebook: 80 pages of ruled, white, smooth, fountain pen-friendly paper!

I tried writing on it and here's a sample page with scribbles of my fountain pens.