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Best Blue-Black Ink?


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So, what's the best tasting pie?

 

Remember to include the lobster pie as one of your options. :thumbup: :thumbup: :thumbup:

A grey day is really a silver one that needs Your polish!

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http://www.optical-illusion-pictures.com/images/stairs.jpg

LOL. Subtle!

 

For the OP: nothing beats a sample. It'll seem expensive at first (to get one of each of the inks you listed), but if it's an ink you plan to use often and in quantity, just get it right the first time. Order a sample of each ink you're considering. It'll be a bit of a chore to get through each one to see what you prefer, but some people would call that "fun". Lol.

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I always kind of liked Noodler's Bad Belted Kingfisher when in the mood for a blue-black. But my Iroshizuku inks always "felt" the best.

 

Sample, sample, and sample some more. It's a cheap way to try out lots of great inks.

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Best Blue-Blacks for me are the ones with Iron gall formulas - the way they perform on almost every paper is excellent. If you like your inks on the dry side combined with a wet writer (which I do), then a great but inexpensive option would be ESS Registrars Ink (ESSR) - 110ml bottle cost me around $20 to be shipped out from the UK to Oz.

My favourite however, is the old Montblanc Midnight Blue Iron gall formula if you can find it! Perfect ink in every way for me though it dries to a dark grey-blue hue unlike the ESSR which is a dark, deep blue.

Cheers

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Today..would be Sheaffer's Skrip { tighten cap tip bottle to fill the well } # 24

Blue - Black ink.......Yup..that's the ticket..............................................................

Usin' in full size Ebonized Pearl Regent lever filler with Jeweler's band.......

 

Fred

we are engaged in a generational battle today....

whose beginning we are closer to than its end.

~ Timothy Geraghty

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Pelikan Blue-Black. Very nice color and shading. It is pretty water resistant. However this is a dry ink. Great for 1.1 stubs, maybe a bit too dry on fine...

+1.

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A lot of good suggestions (my head is spinning) but I would seek out Sandy1's opinion as her nom d'plume in FPN Ink Reviews forum is Ms Blue-Black

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Noodler's Midnight Blue. With some of my nibs it comes out so black that I have to check with a loupe to see the edges. Other pens are dark blue. When I grind nibs, Midnight Blue is my testing choice.

 

Blueberry pie, of course.

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MB Blue black is also a good one

Pens are like watches , once you start a collection, you can hardly go back. And pens like all fine luxury items do improve with time

 

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+1 on both the Sailor. The Noodlers Legal Lapis is a nice looking ink, but Noodler's inks don't work well in many pens.

 

The Diamine ble blck is also very nice.

Jim Couch

Portland, OR

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