Posts filed under Pen Reviews

Otto Hutt Design 04 Wave Blue Fountain Pen Review

Otto Hutt Design 04 Wave Blue Fountain Pen Review

Two months ago, I reviewed the Otto Hutt Design 03 Fountain Pen. I remember that one well, because it took a little bit of time to understand exactly what I had in that pen. The more time I spent with it, the more then pen and I clicked, and I’ve ended up loving it.

You could repeat the exact same process, and same result, with the Otto Hutt Design 04 Wave Blue Fountain Pen.

Otto Hutt Design 04 Wave Blue Fountain Pen

The Design 04 is a classically designed and manufactured German pen. Otto Hutt has been making pens for themselves, and other brands, for nearly a century, and that experience shows in the end result. The quality is exceptional all the way around.

There are seven pens in the Design series, and the 04 sets itself apart with a lacquered barrel, which allows for several different color and design choices. These range from standard solid colors - such as black, white, pink, and green - to an all black model, to different inlays and guilloche patterns, like with this Wave Blue. There are even different hardware colors depending on the pen. There are more individual models on the Design 04 than there are numbers in the Design series!

Otto Hutt Design 04 Wave Blue Open

The metal barrel of the Design 04 is not overly heavy. You feel some weight, but it is balanced in the hand. Posting the cap is possible, but that does alter the balance of the pen significantly and I wouldn’t recommend it.

Balance with this pen is important due to the narrow nature of the grip section. As someone who prefers this size of grip, it is ideal for me, but I know others will find it to be too narrow. The section is long enough to allow you to grip low up against an upturn towards the nib, or pull back to the middle and reside on the taper. Neither the cap threads or barrel step pose any real challenge to a standard grip.

Otto Hutt Design 04 Wave Blue Nib

The stainless steel Fine nib was perfect out the box. And in true German fashion, it is wide and wet. Do I personally prefer finer nibs? Yes. But I’ll be darned if this isn’t a perfect writer. It also started up immediately every time it sat on my desk for several days between use.

Otto Hutt Design 04 Wave Blue Writing

I was able to choose which Design 04 I wanted to review, courtesy of my friends at Kenro Industries - the US distributor for Otto Hutt. As I mentioned above, there are a ton of options, and the Wave Blue stood out not only for the pattern, but as a design style I don’t have in any other pen. That said, Otto Hutt didn’t make it easy with all of the great options!

Otto Hutt Design 04 Wave Blue Cap

The price varies from $200 to $316 in the Design 04 lineup at Pen Chalet, with this exact model checking in at $280. From a value perspective, I think it is right on the mark. I only have to look back to my Tibaldi Perfecta review to realize that the base Design 04 is a much better bang for your buck. From there, you can choose from a slew of designs and features that suit your needs the best.

Right now, the Otto Hutt Design 04 suits my needs for a well-made, classically-designed, wonderful-writing, German-engineered fountain pen, with other models from the brand residing firmly on my radar.

(Kenro Industries provided this product at no charge to The Pen Addict 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!

Otto Hutt Design 04 Wave Blue Lines
Posted on April 12, 2021 and filed under Otto Hutt, Fountain Pens, Pen Reviews.

Conklin Duraflex Elements Fountain Pen Review

Conklin Duraflex Elements Fountain Pen Review

(Sarah Read is an author, editor, yarn artist, and pen/paper/ink addict. You can find more about her at her website and on Twitter. And check out her latest book, Out of Water, now available where books are sold!)

I have a small family of Conklin pens, and I have been lucky with them in that I haven't experienced the inconsistent quality that some users have. (Essentially the reverse of my luck with TWSBIs). All my Conklins have been beautiful and well-performing, so I was excited to try the new Duraflex Elements Fountain Pen, especially when I saw the fire color. I am happy to say that my luck has continued--and I must call it luck, as our own Susan had a very different experience with her version of this edition.

Conklin Duraflex Elements Fountain Pen

I'm really enjoying this pen. The color of the acrylic is fantastic, with black, charcoal, red, dark rose, and clear all tossed like a flow of lava. The pen is sturdy, and very solidly made. It does not feel light or cheap, and the cap, clip, and finials are well fit. The cap screws on securely, and I haven't had any leaking or drying out, even when the pen sat for a few weeks without use. The clip is springy but firm, so it fits well over a stack of paper, but won't slip too easily.

Conklin Duraflex Elements

The pen is a nice medium size--bigger than a Sailor Pro Gear but smaller than a TWSBI 580, so it should suit most hands comfortably. The grip section is made of the same acrylic as the body. It's a little slick, but it contours nicely to keep your grip in place. It takes cartridges or a converter, which comes with the pen.

Conklin Duraflex

A lot of the criticism Conklin receives concerns the quality of their nibs. It's not unearned--there's a lot of inconsistency in user experience, and you don't know if you've gotten a good one or not until you try it. My Conklin Word Gauge is one of the best writers in my collection, but others have had experiences so negative that they've sworn off the brand altogether.

Conklin Duraflex Nib

This Elements pen has the Conklin Omniflex nib--a semi-flex nib with cutout wings designed to allow for some degree of line variation. Of course it does not flex the way we all want it to. It can't meet the bendy standards of vintage pens or dip nibs designed for fancy script. But it does flex a bit, and it adds some lovely character to your writing. Much like a stub nib adds a little bit of italic flavor to writing, this Duraflex nib adds a little bit of flex flavor. Not enough, it could be fairly argued, but I don't think it ever promised that.

Conklin Duraflex Nib Side

My nib performs about how I expected it would. It's wide for a fine line when writing normally, largely because it is a very wet writer--a feature it needs in order to keep up with ink flow when flex writing. When pressure is applied on downstrokes, the line widens, creating an effect that would be very graceful and beautiful if I were any good at this at all. But even with my poor handwriting skills, I like the way this pen makes my writing look, and that's enough to make me reach for it when I need to fill a page. (Note: the slight feathering on the flexed strokes is a result of the paper I was using. I had better experiences with fountain pen friendly paper.)

Conklin Duraflex Writing

While my friends' experiences make me hesitate to recommend buying this pen, my own experiences lead me to encourage you to try one, if you have access. If there's a pen store or pen show near you, this is a great pen to try in person, before you decide whether or not to buy. It's a total bargain at $60--so long as you get a good one.

(JetPens provided this product at no charge to The Pen Addict 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!

Conklin Duraflex Flex
Posted on April 8, 2021 and filed under Conklin, Fountain Pens, Pen Reviews.

Uni Jetstream 4&1 4-color .38 mm Ballpoint Multi Pen and .05 mm Pencil Review

Uni Jetstream 4&1 4-color .38 mm Ballpoint Multi Pen and .05 mm Pencil Review

(Sarah Read is an author, editor, yarn artist, and pen/paper/ink addict. You can find more about her at her website and on Twitter. And check out her latest book, Out of Water, now available where books are sold!)

I've stood firmly against multi-pens in the past. I had my reasons--they were too big to hold comfortably, all the moving parts seemed ill-fitted or would rattle when writing, pieces might break, there was never enough of some of the ink colors, refills were hard to source, and I generally preferred to just carry a variety of writing tools with me rather than mess with those inconveniences of the multi-pen. But those were the multi-pens of yore, and the more recent models I've tried have grown on me. And then when Uni starts putting Ghibli characters on them, well. Then they become must-haves.

Uni Jetstream Multi Pen

The Uni Jetstream 4&1 Kiki's Delivery Service 4 Color 0.38 mm Ballpoint Multi Pen + 0.5 mm Pencil is by far the most multitudinous multi-pen I've tried. Black, red, blue, and green ink each have their own clicky tab, and then the clip, when pushed down, reveals a mechanical pencil. Underneath the finial cap hides an eraser. This is the writing tool equivalent of the Swiss army knife.

Uni Jetstream Multi Pen Knock

Despite its complexity, it is fairly well made, though it hasn't done away with all my multi-pen woes. The body is sturdy, and not as thick as one would think for all the refills it contains. The rubber grip does a lot to help the writing comfort level. And while the refills are small, they're filled with Uni's excellent ink--a ballpoint that feels and acts with the smoothness of a gel pen. Replacement refills (Uni XSR 80-38) are easily obtained at JetPens. The mechanical pencil works well also, though it's a little fiddly to depress the clip for more lead, and the eraser is miniscule. The clip feels like the weak point of the pen. It does rattle a bit, and its springiness (necessary for it's pencil-deploying function) detracts from its clip functionality. I do worry that it will get broken or jammed if I toss the pen in a backpack or pocket without some kind of case or padding--and having it in a case does defeat some of the always-readiness that is the main benefit to a multi-pen. But only time will tell on its durability, and so far all is well.

Uni Jetstream Multi Pen Writing

While it may be big and rattly, I've never felt so prepared for any writing situation. It has everything I need to carry for work, AND it has Gigi on it. I've used it more than I thought I would, and even contemplated a backup copy. It isn't inexpensive for a pen at $24.50, but it's not expensive for four pens and a pencil. Overall I'm very pleased with it.

(JetPens provided this product at no charge to The Pen Addict 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!

Uni Jetstream Multi Pen Kiki
Posted on March 25, 2021 and filed under Uni-Ball, Jetstream, Multi Pen, Pen Reviews.