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Smoothest Ink?


Paladin

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What's the smoothest ink you have every used for everyday writing? I realize it is function of the paper and nib, but it would be interesting to hear your opinions.

 

Thanks :thumbup:

 

BTW what makes an ink smooth? The detergent?

Edited by Paladin
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honestly, I do not notice a lot of difference from ink to ink, though there are a few inks that seem to be a little more dry than others.

 

you might try one of the eel lubricating inks. I like the blue ee a lot, but I am not sure it feels much different from other ink.

 

Maybe it is just me. j

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My personal favourites for smooth ink...

Waterman: Florida Blue and Blue-Black

Aurora: Blue and Black

Dupont: Blue, Black, and Blue-Black (if you can find it)

Sailor: Blue, Black, Blue-Black, and Red-Brown

Sheaffer: Blue, Blue-Black, and Brown

 

 

Talking about fountain pens is like dancing about architecture.

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After this, I will need to clarify that I have no affiliation at all with Waterman but, if a pen or paper gives problems, put Waterman Florida Blue, Violet or a mixture of both and if it works, it works, if it doesn't, anything will.

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I'm not certain how much is ink and how much is the nib. Have some Parker "51"s I think would write smooooth with mud in them.

 

A combination that I've had inked for many months and a joy each time used: Pilot 78G Medium, Swishers (Noodlers) Glacier Blue. Silky smooth.

 

Also a big fan of any Waterman ink.

 

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Waterman Black and Florida Blue flow well in every pen I own. My finicky pens get a straight diet of Waterman ink. Aurora inks also flow well.

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PR DC Blue - it's my "is this nib really scratchy or is it the ink?" ink. If this ink doesn't cure the ills of the nib, nothing will.

 

Diamine Umber and Prussian Blue are very smooth.

 

Penman Emerald is darn-near oily. Adore it. But it's discontinued.

 

Most other inks I use are used because they lubricate well and I steer away from those that don't so it's easier for me to say what doesn't work well for me rather than what does.

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Waterman Florida Blue

Aurora Blue

Dupont Blue

CharlieB

 

"The moment he opened the refrigerator, he saw it. Caponata! Fragrant, colorful, abundant, it filled an entire soup dish, enough for at least four people.... The notes of the triumphal march of Aida came spontaneously, naturally, to his lips." -- Andrea Camilleri, Excursion to Tindari, p. 212

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Noodler's Polar Black is only smooth with a feed/nib through which it reaches the paper. Maybe it's something about its extreme adhesion -- it seems to amplify the baby-bottom-ness of a nib. Of all the modern pens I have tried it in, the only one which writes well with N. Polar Black is a Pelikan (M 14 K nib).

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For my constipated pens, I mix Private Reserve Tanzanite and Daphne Blue (1:2). It eliminated all the problems. And I really like that blue/purple color of the mix.

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Aircorp green-black is smooth writing, imo.

Blessed are they that do his commandments, that they may have right

to the tree of life, and may enter in through the gates into the city.

For without are dogs, and sorcerers, and whoremongers, and murderers,

and idolaters, and whosoever loveth and maketh a lie. Revelation 22:14-15

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I think smoothness often depends on the combination of nib, ink, and paper. I was just noticing today, for example, that new Skrip Blue-Black in a slightly toothy Aurora Optima with B nib felt slightly scratchy on cheap, recycled paper, but smooth as silk on NY Times newsprint.

 

That said, I've found Noodler's Manhattan Blue to be exceptionally smooth -- downright creamy, in fact -- with just about any pen and paper I've ever used.

Edited by Viseguy

Viseguy

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What's the smoothest ink you have every used for everyday writing?

Noodler's American Eel and Polar series are smoothest in my pens.

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