Posts filed under Inkvent

Diamine Inkvent Calendar Day 19

(Susan M. Pigott is a fountain pen collector, pen and paperholic, photographer, and professor. You can find more from Susan on her blog Scribalishess.)

Starting near the end of November, my mom would start making Christmas cookies. She liked to make spritz cookies, carefully squeezing them through her cookie press, creating wreaths, Christmas trees, poinsettias, and candy canes. She’d decorate them with colored sugars, sprinkles, and bits of cherry. She made hundreds of cookies, and I inhaled the buttery treats with abandon. But one cookie I never remember her making was Gingerbread.

Gingerbread is the color for today. It is a tan-brown that evokes the ginger in Gingerbread cookies. Obviously it’s a darker brown than ginger itself. It definitely looks like the cinnamon-y color of Gingerbread men. This is a standard ink with nice shading properties.

On white Rhodia paper, the color is much more yellow-ish. It works well in all three nib sizes, but if you want to enjoy the shading, I recommend a flex nib and/or a broad nib.

Although my mom never made Gingerbread cookies, I’m a big fan of their flavor--the more gingery the better. I’m not as big a fan of this particular color in the Inkvent calendar. I think it’s a bit too light and yellow-leaning for me.

(Cult Pens provided the Diamine Inkvent Calendar to Pen Addict free of charge for review purposes.)


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Posted on December 19, 2019 and filed under Diamine, Inkvent, Ink Reviews.

Diamine Inkvent Calendar Day 18

(Susan M. Pigott is a fountain pen collector, pen and paperholic, photographer, and professor. You can find more from Susan on her blog Scribalishess.)

“The Holly and the Ivy” is one of my favorite Christmas carols. I especially like the version sung by John Rutter’s Cambridge Singers. The carol uses the holly plant to evoke images related to Mary’s birth of Christ.

Holly is the color for Day 18. It is a green sheen ink that leans towards teal. The sheen is a bright magenta, which nicely evokes the red berries of the holly plant.

On white Rhodia paper, the tealishness of the ink comes through more. It has nice shading properties in addition to the sheen. The
ink is quite different from the previous greens in the Inkvent calendar (Mistletoe and Elf). It is much darker, for one, and it has a much bluer tone to it. It’s also the first green ink with sheen.

Holly is a gorgeous color. I don’t write with many green inks, but this is one that I can see myself using well beyond the Christmas season.

(Cult Pens provided the Diamine Inkvent Calendar to Pen Addict free of charge for review purposes.)


Enjoy reading The Pen Addict? Then consider becoming a member to receive additional weekly content, giveaways, and discounts in The Pen Addict shop. Plus, you support me and the site directly, for which I am very grateful.

Membership starts at just $5/month, with a discounted annual option available. To find out more about membership click here and join us!

Posted on December 18, 2019 and filed under Diamine, Inkvent, Ink Reviews.

Diamine Inkvent Calendar Day 17

(Susan M. Pigott is a fountain pen collector, pen and paperholic, photographer, and professor. You can find more from Susan on her blog Scribalishess.)

Every year, my mom bought a poinsettia. It looked lovely throughout the holiday season, but then the petals would fall off and a rather ugly plant would remain. She’d tend to it all year, then put it in a dark closet about a month before Christmas, hoping to persuade it to bloom. It never did, so she’d have to buy a fresh one and throw the old, knobby, stubborn one away.

Today’s ink is Poinsettia and it reflects the intense red of a fresh plant in bloom. This is a standard ink, but where the ink pools you’ll see a bit of gold sheen.

Poinsettia is more vibrant than the other red inks in the Inkvent Calendar so far. It leans towards the blue spectrum and reminds me of cherries--you know, the ones soaked in amaretto and dipped in dark chocolate. Of course, the color is named after the plant and it captures the shade of red perfectly.

I don’t buy poinsettias at Christmas because I have three cats, and poinsettias are poisonous to cats. My husband has threatened to bring a poinsettia home on more than one occasion, but thus far I’ve prevented him from committing kitty murder. Still, whenever I see poinsettias, I remember my mom diligently trying to keep her yearly plant alive. I think of Mom often at Christmas. It was her favorite season. If she were still here, I’d send her a fresh poinsettia every December 1 and tell her just to enjoy it while it bloomed.

(Cult Pens provided the Diamine Inkvent Calendar to Pen Addict free of charge for review purposes.)


Enjoy reading The Pen Addict? Then consider becoming a member to receive additional weekly content, giveaways, and discounts in The Pen Addict shop. Plus, you support me and the site directly, for which I am very grateful.

Membership starts at just $5/month, with a discounted annual option available. To find out more about membership click here and join us!

Posted on December 17, 2019 and filed under Diamine, Inkvent, Ink Reviews.