Jump to content

Turquoise or Royal Blue ink for a letter?


JO01

Recommended Posts

I quite enjoy writing letters, even though my handwriting isn't great and over the last few months, I've written a handful of very respectful fan letters to both major and minor celebrities, specific to the person and including some photographs for autographs.  It's just something I thought of trying one day and the actual process of finding a correspondence address and sorting photographs is all part of the challenge.  I don't really care if I get anything back, it's just an enjoyable pastime.

 

I've always used royal blue ink, and I tend to use ink made by the pen supplier.  I've got both MB and Pelikan royal blue.

 

I'm now looking at Pelikan 4001 turquoise ink, possibly to use as a letter writing ink.

 

This may be an impossible and rhetorical question, but is turquoise likely to be taken a bit less seriously than a royal blue?  Perhaps a bit frivolous?   Should I stick with the traditional blue?

 

What do you think?

 

Thanks.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 10
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

  • Penguincollector

    2

  • JO01

    2

  • SamCapote

    1

  • Mercian

    1

I'm a fan of using many colors of ink, but I do think that Royal Blue would be taken more seriously. 

PAKMAN

minibanner.gif                                    

        My Favorite Pen Restorer                                            

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

In letters to friends, I use a different ink color for each new paragraph, but that's not what you are looking for.

 

Turquoise will stand out more than royal blue, so that would be my choice (unless it's a formal letter). Have you considered dark green as well?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

In a letter I finished today to a pen pal, I used two, maybe three inks. KWZI El Dorado, a golden color and Edelstein Apricot Achat, the 2025 Ink of the Year.  Seems like I briefly used something else too, but I am drawing a blank right now on what it was. The letter was a little over two A5 pages total. 

 

If I were doing something similar, I might use turquoise. Especially if the recepient was someone in the arts.

Brad

"Words are, of course, the most powerful drug used by mankind" - Rudyard Kipling
"None of us can have as many virtues as the fountain-pen, or half its cussedness; but we can try." - Mark Twain

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

For older folks, there may be fond memories of Peacock Blue.  I say go for it.  The letter will be more memorable than the typical royal blue.

With the new FPN rules, now I REALLY don't know what to put in my signature.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

@JO01:
FWIW, when Montblanc sold an 'Ink of Friendship', it was a turquoise ink.

IIRC, in the Victorian era, brown was the preferred colour of ink for writing to friends.


My only 'hard' recommendation is that you choose an ink that looks nice (and is easy to read) on whatever paper you are writing on.

 

If you want to go very 'traditional' you could get some light-blue writing paper and write on it in a blue-black ink.
Or maybe use a sepia-coloured ink on ivory paper.

 

Personally, when writing to friends I like to use dark brown or murky-green ink on paper that is white or cream, or sepia ink on ivory paper. Or R&K 'Scabiosa' on either of those.

If I were writing to a celebrity, I think that I would go with an iron-gall blue-black on the pale-blue paper.
It's easy to read, and is slightly more 'formal'-looking (which seems appropriate for writing to someone I've never met), but it is still a 'different'-enough colour to get noticed.
(Plus I love the shading!)


YMMV, but I find that it can be hard to read a full page of writing that has been done in a very brightly-coloured ink.

So I save my brightly-coloured inks (whether turquoise, bright red, or bright blue, or orange) for shorter messages - e.g. notes inside greetings cards.

I hope that this list of opinions/options is of some use to you - even if it only makes you certain that you actually prefer to use Royal Blue ink! ;)
Slàinte,
M.

large.Mercia45x27IMG_2024-09-18-104147.PNG.4f96e7299640f06f63e43a2096e76b6e.PNG  Foul in clear conditions, but handsome in the fog.  spacer.png

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If I were you, I'd use royal blue for writing letters to male celebrities, and turquoise for letters to female ones. In my experience, girls seem to appreciate turquoise as a colour in general, blokes less so. Perhaps your chosen celebrity would be more likely to write a response if you tailored your choice of ink colour . 📝

fpn_1497391483__snailbadge.png

 

🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇺🇸

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

   I think @Ted Nashe is onto something regarding tailoring the ink to the letter recipient.

 

  There are sooo many shades of turquoise and teal, there’s bound to be one more suitable to an artist that does serious work, and one for those who might do lighter things, and something else yet again for a more flamboyant artist of any sort.  For the more serious, I might use something like Pilot Ku-Jaku, or Lamy Petrol (either one). For the lighthearted, Sheaffer’s Peacock Blue (my school day favorite) or Leonardo Turchese Hawaii; and for the flamboyant, Wearingeul Wayfarer or Diamine Vibe. I’m a big turquoise ink collector, there really is a shade for every writing situation, and every one will stand out- whether it’s a pale shading ink that leans grey, or a beautiful vibrant color that sheens red, or a tone on tone sparkling sea water hue.

Top 5 (in no particular order) of 25 currently inked pens:

Parker Duofold Centennial IM, RO Rose Gold Antiqua

MontBlanc Bohème Noir F, MB Midnight Blue 

Pelikan M800 needlepoint, Kuretake Shikon

MontBlanc Noblesse M, KWZ Sheen Machine 2

Waterman 52 EF, Herbin Bleu Pervenche

always looking for penguin fountain pens and stationery 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 11/19/2025 at 8:26 PM, Penguincollector said:

or a beautiful vibrant color that sheens red

That sounds lovely, which turquoise ink would give me that please?

 

On 11/15/2025 at 1:12 AM, Mercian said:

I hope that this list of opinions/options is of some use to you - even if it only makes you certain that you actually prefer to use Royal Blue ink!

It does. Thank you. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

36 minutes ago, JO01 said:

That sounds lovely, which turquoise ink would give me that please?


   Try Diamine Vibe. It’s from last year’s Inkvent, available in 50 ml bottles. I absolutely love it.

 This is the light catching the sheen on Canopus paper written with a Sailor Hocoro Fude:

 

large.IMG_2152.jpeg.f30cec820c1ddf07e4b7619808e199a8.jpeg
 

  This is the actual colour of the ink- same paper, Sheaffer Jr dipped, different lighting (the PB is a dot of Sheaffer Peacock Blue as the writing sample is a piece of a larger comparison of turquoise inks):

 

large.IMG_2137.jpeg.ce12bfb2a17a31210dbcbc881484fa17.jpeg
 

  I have a gallery file called “Inks” that has a good number of my turquoise ink cards if you want to see more turquoise inks:

 

Inks
 

 

Top 5 (in no particular order) of 25 currently inked pens:

Parker Duofold Centennial IM, RO Rose Gold Antiqua

MontBlanc Bohème Noir F, MB Midnight Blue 

Pelikan M800 needlepoint, Kuretake Shikon

MontBlanc Noblesse M, KWZ Sheen Machine 2

Waterman 52 EF, Herbin Bleu Pervenche

always looking for penguin fountain pens and stationery 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Royal blue & turquoise are both good choices.  If you care to look a little further,  Schaffer purple ink in cartridges works well on white Clairefontaine paper.

 

Life is too bad to drink short wine. (Arlen)

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Most Contributions

    1. amberleadavis
      amberleadavis
      43972
    2. PAKMAN
      PAKMAN
      35662
    3. inkstainedruth
      inkstainedruth
      31662
    4. Ghost Plane
      Ghost Plane
      28220
    5. Bo Bo Olson
      Bo Bo Olson
      27747
  • Upcoming Events

  • Blog Comments

    • Misfit
      Oh to have that translucent pink Prera! @migo984 has the Oeste series named after birds. There is a pink one, so I’m assuming Este is the same pen as Oeste.    Excellent haul. I have some Uniball One P pens. Do you like to use them? I like them enough, but don’t use them too much yet.    Do you or your wife use Travelers Notebooks? Seeing you were at Kyoto, I thought of them as there is a store there. 
    • A Smug Dill
      It's not nearly so thick that I feel it comprises my fine-grained control, the way I feel about the Cross Peerless 125 or some of the high-end TACCIA Urushi pens with cigar-shaped bodies and 18K gold nibs. Why would you expect me or anyone else to make explicit mention of it, if it isn't a travesty or such a disappointment that an owner of the pen would want to bring it to the attention of his/her peers so that they could “learn from his/her mistake” without paying the price?
    • szlovak
      Why nobody says that the section of Tuzu besides triangular shape is quite thick. Honestly it’s the thickest one among my many pens, other thick I own is Noodler’s Ahab. Because of that fat section I feel more control and my handwriting has improved. I can’t say it’s comfortable or uncomfortable, but needs a moment to accommodate. It’s funny because my school years are long over. Besides this pen had horrible F nib. Tines were perfectly aligned but it was so scratchy on left stroke that collecte
    • stylographile
      Awesome! I'm in the process of preparing my bag for our pen meet this weekend and I literally have none of the items you mention!! I'll see if I can find one or two!
    • inkstainedruth
      @asota -- Yeah, I think I have a few rolls in my fridge that are probably 20-30 years old at this point (don't remember now if they are B&W or color film) and don't even really know where to get the film processed, once the drive through kiosks went away....  I just did a quick Google search and (in theory) there was a place the next town over from me -- but got a 404 error message when I tried to click on the link....  Ruth Morrisson aka inkstainedruth 
  • Chatbox

    You don't have permission to chat.
    Load More
  • Files






×
×
  • Create New...