Posts filed under Pen Reviews

Pairings Party: Fountain Telling Willow Fountain Pen, Sailor Manyo Uri

Pairings Party: Fountain Telling Willow Fountain Pen, Sailor Manyo Uri

Getting to talk to makers and vendors is the one of the best parts of any pen show, and I made that a priority at the 2026 Atlanta Pen Show. That’s where I got to spend time talking to Kristen Brooks of Fountain Telling, and she got to share with me the story of her latest pen design, Willow.

Fountain Telling Willow Fountain Pen

I’ll be the first to admit that when I first laid eyes on this pen I wasn’t sure what to think, but once I heard the story behind it, I couldn’t stop smiling. I firmly believe that the best products have great stories, and Kristen recently shared the impetus for Willow with Caroline Foty in last month’s Meet Your Maker:

“The “Willow” pen is designed to represent Brooks’ dog, Willow, an Australian shepherd. “She’s my entire world wrapped into a dog. She’s my service dog, she’s a competition dog – she does dock diving, barn hunting, and agility – she’s with me wherever I go. I like to say she picked my husband for me.” The pen represents the silhouette of Willow’s body: “She has a narrow nose, a wider face, a narrow neck but broad shoulders, a fluffy butt, and a little nub tail. The nub on the cap is her tail. I looked at her and thought, This is an interesting shape, how would it be as a pen?” It turned out to be not only a striking pen, but also a comfortable one. “It’s beginner friendly. My husband is new to pens and we find that it helps to seat the grip.” Reactions to the pen have been a source of amusement. “It’s designed after a dog, I can’t help where your mind goes!””

Love it!!! 🐶

As a dog person myself, I am way in on this. But as a pen person also, how does it work? Surprisingly well.

Fountain Telling Willow Fountain Pen Barrel

I’m historically not a “curves” pen shape person, but the more I try different models in different shapes, the more I am becoming a convert. Many pens such as this are purposefully designed to fit into your hands seamlessly, and that’s what I get from the Willow.

Fountain Telling Willow Fountain Pen Grip

When writing, the Neck of the dog (there’s a description I’ve never used in a pen review!) sits perfectly in the cusp of my hand. Hand sizes are obviously different between each person so your mileage may vary, but this Willow feels like it was made for me. Aside from the Neck, the Tail gives me endless joy just thinking about it. It’s so stubby, and makes me think about its namesake every time I see it.

Kristen gave me this pen, and allowed me to pick out which barrel color I wanted, which is no easy feat. I went with her Three Olive Martini material, which I learned after the fact is another pen makers favorite blank. So yes, I have good taste!

Sailor Manyo Uri

To prove that, I had my choice of inks to match to this pen. Terasnishi Emotional Olive is the perfect choice, right? Wrong! It’s Sailor Manyo Uri. Why the odd choice over the easy choice? With Uri, you never know what color is going to show up on the page.

Whatever color it is going to be, I did know that it would match this pen perfectly. There is a range of Brown and Greens all throughout this pen, and I knew Uri was going to give it the overall feel I was looking for.

The one thing I didn’t know is how the paper in the Nonble A5 Notebook was going to handle this setup. I bought it at Choosing Keeping when I was in London for the Relay 10th Anniversary event, and finally cracked it open this week.

Nonble Notebook

The paper inside is called Galbus COC, and not only have I never heard of it before, I can find absolutely zero information on it online. That said, it’s great for fountain pens in limited testing. Writing with an Extra Fine Jowo #6 Nib and an ink I’m familiar with, it worked perfectly. I’ll spend more time with it in the coming months and put out a full review, but for now, it seems like a good option.

Is the Fountain Telling Willow a good option for you? If you are looking for creativity, whimsy, and storytelling wrapped up in one beautiful package, then I think so. Mix in some fun ink and a fresh page, and you are ready for a Pairings Party of your own!

(Fountain Telling provided this pen at no charge to The Pen Addict.)


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Posted on May 4, 2026 and filed under Fountain Telling, Fountain Pens, Pen Reviews.

LAMY noto Teal Ballpoint Pen Review

LAMY noto Teal Ballpoint Pen Review

As a long-time LAMY fan, not even I have tried all of their pens and pencils, but I’m getting one step closer with this review of the LAMY noto.

In my mind, LAMY does entry-level as well as anyone that’s not looking to dominate retail shelves with three-packs of pens, or office supply cabinets with dozen-count boxes. Entry-level in their case means a single pen made well, and for a fair price. The noto ranges from $12-16 depending on the color (this Teal model is a “Special Edition” and runs $14,) and places itself in the popular “upgrade from my first pen” category.

LAMY noto Teal Ballpoint Pen

Is it an upgrade, though? Let’s take a look.

The noto (I’m having a hard time not capitalizing “noto,” but that’s how LAMY lists it,) is a plastic barrel, retractable, ballpoint pen. Designed by Naoto Fukasawa, it is the only LAMY creation by what seems to be quite a prolific designer. The noto fits the LAMY aesthetic, so I’d say they nailed the design brief.

The standout design points of the noto are the triangular grip section, and what I’m calling an inset clip that appears built in to the barrel. These features are also ones that can be divisive for anyone interested in buying the noto.

LAMY noto vs AL-Star

LAMY Denim AL-Star ballpoint, top.

While the triangular grip is less intrusive than the molded grip section used on their Safari and AL-Star lineups, it can still pose a problem for non-traditional grips. It’s comfortable for a standard tripod grip like mine, and I can even rotate the barrel when writing without the clip hitting my hand way due to its design. I also like the monotone matching throughout the Teal barrel.

The clip design … I just can’t get behind it from a functional perspective. It looks good, and it is unobtrusive, but it requires a little extra if you want to clip it to something. Maybe you have to tilt your paper at an angle, of maybe it takes two hands to attach. Whatever it is, it’s extra. It’s a form over function design. I like the form, and don’t use the function.

LAMY noto refill

The refill used by the Noto is their classic M16 ballpoint. I must be an outlier in that I enjoy this refill, because it does get some grief. As far as standard ballpoint ink formulations go, it is up there in quality and performance. This Black Medium refill is dark and smooth, and the tip stays clean. Maybe one day LAMY will allow customers to easily upgrade to the uniball Jetstream-filled LAMY M17 refill, but today is not that day. Regardless, I think it writes great as-is.

LAMY noto ballpoint writing

To answer the “upgrade” question above, I’ll be direct and say that the LAMY noto - or other entry-level LAMY ballpoints like the XEVO - cannot compete on pure refill performance with any uniball Jetstream ballpoint. No ballpoint can, to be clear, so why consider the noto? It looks fantastic, feels great in the hand, writes well, and is fun to use. At $14, it makes for a good personal, portable option, and would make a good gift, especially give the range of color options.

The LAMY noto makes me smile, and that’s as good of a reason to own it as any.

(Goldspot Pens provided this product at a discount to The Pen Addict for review purposes.)


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LAMY noto Writing
Posted on April 27, 2026 and filed under Lamy, Ballpoint, Pen Reviews.

Pairings Party: Kakimori Frost Violet Fountain Pen, Taccia Aomurasaki

Kakimori Frost Violet Fountain Pen, Taccia Aomurasaki

Dark Purple has always been my vibe, and these two separate acquisitions - the Kakimori Frost Violet Fountain Pen and Taccia Aomurasaki Ink - ended up being the pairings party I didn’t know I needed.

Kakimori Frost Fountain Pen Taccia Aomurasaki

Let’s kick things off with a review of the fountain pen. Kakimori introduced their Frost pen series back in 2024 with both a fountain pen and rollerball version. The idea being that the nibs were swappable, meaning you could buy the fountain pen setup, add on the rollerball nib, and use it with an ink cartridge or converter. The reverse is also true, and the total price ends up the same no matter which base you start with.

Kakimori Frost Violet Fountain Pen

I stuck with only the fountain pen, as I traditionally don’t care for the rollerball nib/fountain pen ink setup. The option is there is I ever decide to, though. The fountain pen is only available with Fine or Medium nibs, so I went with the narrower of the two. It’s a Steel nib, and looks like a #5 with Western tip sizing, and the line width agrees with that. I would prefer Extra Fine, but the ink flow is consistent, and shows off well.

Kakimori Frost Fountain Pen Taccia Aomurasaki Ink

The Frost Fountain Pen is lightweight, checking in at only 14 grams. That’s identical to the Pilot Prera, another small and light fountain pen. The Frost also has a very narrow tapered grip section (9.2 mm, compared to 10.6 on the Prera,) and may pose a problem for some. It works for me, but the Frost finish on the pen gives it a satin-y feel that can be slick with dry fingertips.

The cap is threaded, and only takes a fraction of a turn to open. With that quick opening I wonder about the cap coming loose, but I haven’t carried it in my pocket enough to tell. It should be fine give it is plastic on plastic. The cap does post, but not deep enough to make it a viable option.

Kakimori Frost Fountain Pen Writing

Given my preferences for small, light, and narrow pens, the Kakimori Frost should be right up my alley. It is, visually speaking, but I would be hard pressed to recommend it for $58. That’s simply too much for this “feel” of a pen. I get that they are made by a small maker (a personal favorite, at that,) and likely in small batches so there is real cost involved, but the nib swappability ($72 total for one barrel and two nibs,) isn’t enough of a feature for me.

I like it, but in the land of pens like the Platinum Prefounte and Pilot Kakuno, I’m not sure the Frost can compete.

Taccia Aomurasaki Review

OG Tomoe River 52 gsm, left, Kokuyo Good Tools, right.

It’s saving grace, for the time being, is my acquisition of Taccia Aomurasaki Ink. Given its name, with ao meaning Blue and murasaki meaning Purple, I would think the Blue tones would pop more, but I’m glad they don’t. This is more of a Purple/Grey or Purple/Black, and it’s glorious. From the moment I inked it up I’ve been hooked, and that hasn’t changed given the different paper types I’ve tested it on.

Taccia Aomurasaki Ink Writing

It flows well from the Fine nib in the Kakimori, and my next fill will be something in the XXF category to see if I can still pull Purple out of it, or if it is too dark for that fine of line. Regardless, it looks great, and I can see it being used in many pen types and nib sizes. It’s jumped immediately up towards the top of the list.

So there you have it: mixed reactions at this party, with the pen leaving a bit to be desired, and the ink off the charts good.

(JetPens provided the Kakimori pen at no charge, and Vanness Pens provided the Taccia Ink at a discount to The Pen Addict for review purposes.)


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Kakimori Fountain Pen Writing
Posted on April 20, 2026 and filed under Kakimori, Fountain Pens, Pen Reviews, Taccia, Ink Reviews.