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Ink Review : Pelikan Edelstein Turmaline


namrehsnoom

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Ink Review : Pelikan Edelstein Turmaline

--- Ink of the Year 2012 ---

 

fpn_1485109961__caption_-_edelstein_turm

 

Pen: Lamy AL-star, M-nib

Paper: Rhodia N°16 notepad 80 gsm

 

fpn_1485110042__pelikan_edelstein_-_turm

 

Review

 

In 2011 Pelikan introduced the Edelstein series of high-end inks, available in a variety of colours. The theme of the Edelstein concept is the gemstone – each colour corresponds to the beautiful colour of a gem. The inks themselves are presented in 50 ml high-value bottles, that are truly beautiful, and worthy of a place on your desk.

 

In this review I put the spotlight on Turmaline, the Edelstein Ink of the Year 2012. This is a limited edition ink, that’s probably difficult to find today. Pelikan themselves describe the colour as “plum”. Myself, I just see a very bright and flamboyant pink. I’m the first to admit that I’m not a “pink ink” person, but nevertheless this ink has a strange attraction. Perhaps it’s the boldness of the ink’s colour… this is definitely NOT a shy or subdued ink.

 

fpn_1485109975__pelikan_edelstein_-_turm

 

Technically, the ink behaved really fine, with good flow and saturation, and a good contrast with the paper even in the finer nibs. With broader nibs there is some really nice shading that accentuates the pinkyness of the ink. Overall a pleasurable ink to write with.

 

fpn_1485110030__pelikan_edelstein_-_turm

 

Drying times are reasonable, ranging from 10 to 20 seconds, depending on the type of paper. Turmaline copes well with a wide variety of paper – and can even tolerate the crappy ones. On Moleskine, there’s only some barely noticeable feathering going on – coupled with significant show-through and some bleed-through. On other papers the ink behaved impeccably.

 

fpn_1485110054__pelikan_edelstein_-_turm

 

Turmaline is not a water-resistant ink though. It smudges easily, but without impacting the readability of the text. It could handle 15 minutes of water droplets fairly well, but when your writing comes into contact with running water, the paper is left with unreadable pinkish smudges. Although… for this ink, water-resistance should not be a concern – I doubt you’ll use this colour for business correspondence ;-). Be aware that this ink will stain your pen – it takes some serious cleaning to remove all ink residue from inside your pen. The chromatography of this (p)ink looks very interesting, with some water-soluble yellow and grey components.

 

fpn_1485109985__pelikan_edelstein_-_turm

 

Conclusion

 

I think for a pink this ink doesn’t stink. This is not a colour for me, but if you like pinkish inks, this one is probably worth looking at. It’s bold and bright, and definitely an attention-drawer.

 

my overall score: B+

 

fpn_1485110067__pelikan_edelstein_-_turm

 

fpn_1485110081__pelikan_edelstein_-_turm

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  • mehandiratta

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This is one I wish was still around. I'd love to have tried it -- it's a pretty color.

Thanks for the review, nonetheless.

Ruth Morrisson aka inkstainedruth

"It's very nice, but frankly, when I signed that list for a P-51, what I had in mind was a fountain pen."

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Not my cup either but I love your reviews. Especially the "real" gems themselves, right up at the top!!

 

Mike

Life is too short to drink bad wine (Goethe)

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Thanks for your review. I have this ink, and despite the fact I don't generally like pink inks, I like this one. However, I never use it. You've reminded me to dig it out and have a play, thanks.

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I just PIF-ed away an ink very similar to this one - so yeah, not a color for me. But thank you for the comprehensive review.

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