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Yu-Yake - Pilot Iroshizuku


visvamitra

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Reviving a very old post just to ask one question:

 

Is it normal that my Yu-Yaki darkens over time in the pen? I cleaned my pens thoroughly before inking, and I noticed it for the past few fills. The ink gets darker after 2-3 weeks in the pen. It does not become darker in the bottle.

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Many of my inks in filled pens darken after a few weeks. I don't think it is any difference between the inks used to fill the pens, merely the exposure to air & loss of water from evaporation. Some I am happy to see the change & most resolve themselves after a quick dip into an old inkwell I keep filled with mere water for the times I need a quick start for a pen I have neglected.

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Many of my inks in filled pens darken after a few weeks. I don't think it is any difference between the inks used to fill the pens, merely the exposure to air & loss of water from evaporation. Some I am happy to see the change & most resolve themselves after a quick dip into an old inkwell I keep filled with mere water for the times I need a quick start for a pen I have neglected.

That explains it, thank you. Yu-Yaki evaporates quickly in my Lamy Al-Star. In two weeks it almost dried up, making the remaining ink very dark. I have other Ironshizuku inks in my Pelikans, they dont evaporate this quickly. Maybe it is a ink converter issue.

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Yes, Yu-yake darken over time because of evaporation. I doesn't seem to matter whether it is in a refilled cartridge or converter. Sometimes, if I have a half-converter/cartridge full of an ink that seems to have darkened, I will add a drop of distilled water to reconstitute the ink. But some inks I really enjoy when just a bit of water has evaporated. They seem to flow easier as their lubrication is more concentrated.

"Today will be gone in less than 24 hours. When it is gone, it is gone. Be wise, but enjoy! - anonymous today

 

 

 

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Yes, Yu-yake darken over time because of evaporation. I doesn't seem to matter whether it is in a refilled cartridge or converter. Sometimes, if I have a half-converter/cartridge full of an ink that seems to have darkened, I will add a drop of distilled water to reconstitute the ink. But some inks I really enjoy when just a bit of water has evaporated. They seem to flow easier as their lubrication is more concentrated.

 

I find the same. Been using Yu-yake to underline (my way of Highlighting) for a couple years now. I tried several orange inks but this one has worked out the best for me.
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Yes, Yu-yake darken over time because of evaporation. I doesn't seem to matter whether it is in a refilled cartridge or converter. Sometimes, if I have a half-converter/cartridge full of an ink that seems to have darkened, I will add a drop of distilled water to reconstitute the ink. But some inks I really enjoy when just a bit of water has evaporated. They seem to flow easier as their lubrication is more concentrated.

 

Thank you for your information. It is reason why I always feel like the color I got is different every time (I rarely use Yu-yake for daily writing, just use it occasionally for some quick sketch). I just surprise to find out that the ink color changes overtime.

Thank for your tip to reconstitute the ink too. I will try it right away with my current Yu-yake inked pen.

:D Nice to meet you :D

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