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Ap Limited Nashiji Red


jandrese

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This is the AP Limited Nashiji Red from the Apprentice series of the Urushi and Sakura Lacquer Art lineup. The Apprentice series comprises pens between ~$800 to $2000, that is, AP Limited’s most affordable line of pens. Interestingly, AP sells through dealers and to some extent at least online as well on their own website. This pen lists for $1200 on the AP Limited website. AP Limited was started by Anuj and Smita Podder and features many fantastic art pens of Russian and Japanese aesthetics. Sometimes, the Russian painting and Japanese urushi/maki-e appear on the same pen but for the most part it’s an either-or situation. The higher end pens are well received by the community but having headquarters in Los Angeles they are not either a Russian or Japanese company. Nevertheless, the urushi work is completed in Japan so like Danitrio I think they qualify as Japanese for if it was not for the artwork the pens become uninteresting.

 

48056502926_e368b697a2_k.jpgIMG_1950 by Ja Ja, on Flickr

48056600032_e7af330a53_k.jpgIMG_1958 by Ja Ja, on Flickr

 

This particular pen is a curious beauty and a good writer. It may be one of the least expensive pens from AP Limited but it is not exactly affordable. The name of the pen, Nashiji Red, is a bit misleading despite their marketing language/wishful thinking. Nashiji is pear and in the art realm refers to the texture of a freshly sliced pear. Japanese swords can have a nashiji texture appearance (due to how the steel was folded and, more importantly, polished) and maki-e work in nashiji typically uses gold or silver powders to create the appearance. This pen uses raden or crushed Abalone and the info from AP Limited acknowledges the schism from tradition. The pen is attractive, which is a large part of why I bought it, but it does not look like nashiji to me, it just looks like densely sprinkled raden. The base color appears to be red or shu urushi upon which the raden is built upon. The shu urushi is visible by itself on the section and on the clip creating a nice and calming visual counterbalance to the intense sparkles of the rest of the pen. I appreciate the pen is signed by the artist.

 

48056503211_6f8f72bff5_k.jpgIMG_1952 by Ja Ja, on Flickr

48056548608_501c7bd5cc_b.jpgIMG_1951 by Ja Ja, on Flickr

 

The ebonite pen body itself is fairly simple tube shape with sharply tapered ends, and a step down to the cap threads. The cap itself features a metal clip with ball termination. The section tapers going down towards the nib before flaring out again in a somewhat vintage fashion. The #8 18k AP branded nib sits on a plastic feed and drinks from a cartridge converter. I’m told that the nib is a medium and that AP Limited is only shipping with medium nibs from now on since minimum orders from Bock are too large (300 units?) to make offering more tip sizes viable. The pen is large but is barely big enough to make the #8 nib appear at home. For a size comparison the Nashiji Red it is pictured next to the Sailor KOP in vermilion urushi, which itself has an oversize nib. The AP nib is not all that well fitted to the feed as there is some play, but it is not loose per se. Perhaps it is more how the nib is fitted to the section, but the Sailor nib/feed/section are much better engineered and fitted.

 

48056549343_47ca9b90c8_k.jpgIMG_1959 by Ja Ja, on Flickr

48056599732_c39910bbcd_k.jpgIMG_1953 by Ja Ja, on Flickr

 

Compared to the Sailor and indeed just about any other high-end urushi pen, including other AP Limited pens, the finish on this pen can perhaps be found wanting. From arm’s length nothing is amiss. Examining the pen up close one begins to notice some areas that seem to fall short of perfection. For example, the urushi piles up unevenly at the step transitions on either end of the pen. Likewise, there is some unevenness and small-scale roughness at the caps edge and near the section threads. This can be seen to be a flaw, as charming evidence of hand work, or perhaps to an expert as an unavoidable consequence of this type of finish. I suspect that as the name implies this pen was not made by a highly experienced master and/or was made to a price point. If not made by the master himself the master would have approved the work of the apprentice, who may indeed be very skilled. In any event, it seems X amount of effort was put in to the perfection of the finish in consideration of the price paid for the work. I’m not unhappy about the quality or lesser perfection of the finish but some may reject the pen for not having what they believe to be an ultimate urushi/maki-e finish.

 

48056599427_ea704fc010_h.jpgIMG_1955 by Ja Ja, on Flickr

48056601077_3c51c53877_k.jpgIMG_1970 by Ja Ja, on Flickr

 

The nib is a wet writer and is smooth offering little to no feedback. Putting down a line is effortless, and it is a lux writing experience. There is no line variation, no flex, no nothing interesting in the writing characteristics. It just writes.

 

48056504806_7f6aa35933_b.jpgap by Ja Ja, on Flickr

48056600722_d41580a54b_k.jpgIMG_1963 by Ja Ja, on Flickr

48056549983_4d8742dcf0_k.jpgIMG_1964 by Ja Ja, on Flickr

48056504061_63154ad803_k.jpgIMG_1966 by Ja Ja, on Flickr

 

One of the nice things about this pen is the packaging, which is a lux presentation. The paulownia wood box is as expected for an urushi pen from Japan. There is the addition of an AP branded cleaning cloth and a more interesting card with the artists name as well as the signature of the AP Limited founder. These items contribute to the buying/ownership experience in a positive way. While I have dozens of urushi pens this is first AP Limited. I’m much more impressed with the AP lineup, well, the lineup I can afford, than ever and this may not be my last AP Limited pen.

 

48056549783_b37137177d_b.jpgIMG_1965 by Ja Ja, on Flickr

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I hope you enjoy the pen! The only AP Limited pens I'd seen before this were the super high-end and ornate ones; now you've gotten me interested in this Apprentice line...

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I have the Apprentice "Sakura Lacquer" Rabbit pen -- I'm pretty sure its acrylic paint. Great pen, and mine has no wiggle with the feed or nib, but I have no idea what Sakura Lacquer is/supposed to be.

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I have the Apprentice "Sakura Lacquer" Rabbit pen -- I'm pretty sure its acrylic paint. Great pen, and mine has no wiggle with the feed or nib, but I have no idea what Sakura Lacquer is/supposed to be.

Cool, I've not seen that one. They don't exactly say on the website what Sakura lacquer is do they? It could be urushi but stenciled or silk screened. The price would match that. For example, the Namiki Nippon Art series that are evidently mostly silk screen urushi with some hand touch highlights that go for similar prices if not a bit less. Hope you like it and it's a good writer. There don't seem to be many AP Limited pens out there.

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  • 1 year later...

thank you this excellent review. its interesting that your pen has a #8 nib. all my writer's size pens have a #6 nib.

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On 6/18/2019 at 1:42 AM, jandrese said:

Cool, I've not seen that one. They don't exactly say on the website what Sakura lacquer is do they? It could be urushi but stenciled or silk screened. The price would match that. For example, the Namiki Nippon Art series that are evidently mostly silk screen urushi with some hand touch highlights that go for similar prices if not a bit less. Hope you like it and it's a good writer. There don't seem to be many AP Limited pens out there.

This is from the AP website:

"Sakura Lacquer Art is the AP Limited Editions' tribute to first time collectors and others who appreciate Japanese Lacquer Art. These pens are crafted using a unique process that involves the initial layers screen printed on the pen and hand touched up with Hira Maki-e and lacquer."

It is my understanding that with AP "screen print" is a small-scale manual process.

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