Review: Kuretake Brush Writer Blendable Color Brush Pens

This review is by Kalina Wilson, who can also be found at geminica.com.


I'm a fan of Kuretake's gray Fudegokochi pen as a tool for adding a water-soluble middle value to sketches.  Here's another option for adding middle values: the Kuretake Brush Writer in light gray ($7.50 at JetPens).  I had been considering these pens for awhile, but finally pulled the trigger after reading Stephanie Law's review.


The Brush Writer line offers a real brush tip set on a squeezable plastic body filled with water-based dye ink.


Brush writer 5


I tested this pen in violet as well as light gray in order to explore the "blendable" functionality, though if I buy any more of these it'll be the gray and blue-gray since violet and the other colors seem too highly saturated for regular sketching.  When will I ever want to draw a landscape or portrait in bright, straight-ahead purple?  I'd go with Copic's wine, but... not this purple.


Here's the really great thing about the Brush Writer:  the tip is an actual brush, not molded felt, and in fact it looks identical to my excellent Kuretake No. 13 Hair Brush Pen.


Brush writer comparison


Comparing tips, top to bottom: Kuretake Fudegokochi gray pen which is truly a pen rather than a brush, Kuretake Brush Writer in light gray, Kuretake No. 13 hair brush pen loaded with a dark gray ink, and Pentel Color Brush in black.


In the sample above, it looks like the light gray ink in the Brush Writer is significantly lighter than the Fudegokochi.  Below it seems just slightly lighter.  This is all due to the Fudegokochi's variability- it is lighter on sized watercolor paper than on, say, plate bristol. Generally, though, the Fudegokochi is a little darker and warmer than the Brush Writer in light gray.  Both pens wash out with water quite easily, though washing over the Fudegokochi will often leave a trace of your original line. 


Brush writer 6


The body of the Brush Writer looks a lot like the Pentel Color Brushes which are widely available in the US.  My partner reported that he doesn't use his Pentel Color Brush because he was always hitting feast or famine with it - it would run dry, he'd squeeze the body for more ink, the tip would flood with ink to the point of being unusable, and then as soon as that was cleaned up it would be dry again.  When I tested his Pentel brush, that's exactly what it did for me as well.  I had no such problem with the Kuretake Color Brush. However, when I did experiment with squeezing the body for increased ink flow...


 Brush writer gray Brush writer purple flooding 


...the results were very different in the two Brush Writers.  The light gray brush did exactly what I wanted - it just got a little wetter, enough to change the line from brushy to solid.  The purple brush flooded so I got a blurb of ink on the brush tip and it made little lakes on the surface of my paper. When I squeezed it again, it seemed like ink and air bubbles were practically dripping out of the base around the brush tip.  The only Pentel Color Brush I have ever used behaved just like this purple Brush Writer when squeezed and it required constant squeezing to achieve ink flow, so even with this inconsistent behavior the Brush Writer is ahead... I just wish I could tell you they would all act like the light gray brush, because that one is spot on.  While I am going to recommend this pen, it would be a good idea to test yours first on scrap paper to see if your ink release mechanism is leaky.


The light gray pen had no problems.  The tip offers good control but the loose feel of a brush, and ink flow is good and controllable.   Use it over waterproof ink as a convenient form of gray watercolor. Let it dry, and you gain the ability to layer for a darker gray (though it never becomes waterproof).  I sometimes keep Noodler's Lexington Gray in my brush pen for this kind of work, but for sketching it's great to have a water soluble gray as well and this is a good one.  Sometimes I wished it was a bit darker, but this is "light gray" so perhaps I'll give the regular gray pen a try.


Brush writer 1  Brush writer 2


If you use the Brush Writer over other water-soluble inks or watercolor, it melds with them beautifully.  It was a lot of fun to use the pen this way.


  Brush writer 5

Brush writer 7As mentioned above, I got the Brush Writer in purple as well in order to test blending.  It worked fine - the drawing to the right was made with the purple pen, then the light gray was used to blur the purple into shadows - but this techniques works fine with other water-based inks too so I'd just as soon abandon the purple in favor of a fountain pen loaded with an ink of my choice.


The Fudegokochi is great as a pen that works well for line drawings in gray that can be wetted down to simulate watercolors. The Brush Writer has a different role - it won't write like a pen as well as the Fudegokochi, but if you want the do your work with an actual brush and blend into ink or watercolors, it's a great tool.  Just test for potential flooding first.

Posted on April 8, 2011 and filed under Brush Pen, Geminica, Kuretake.

Ohto Needle-Point Slim Line 0.3mm Ballpoint Review

Sharpie Pen


I was really excited to give this new Ohto Needle-Point Slim Line 0.3mm ballpoint pen a twirl as soon as I saw it show up in JetPens new product feed (they have been on quite a roll lately fyi). First off, it is an Ohto, whose pen designs I really enjoy, and secondly, it is an 0.3mm ballpoint. Not 0.4mm like the Zebra Techno Line, and not 0.5mm like the Uni-Ball Jetstream, but 0.3mm. Easily the finest tipped ballpoint I have used.


My expectations of this pen were so high that I wanted it to be perfect, and like many of us find from time to time, things have a hard time living up to perfection. I'll say right offhand that this is a really cool pen and one I will keep using, but there are a few little things that get to me. The largest culprit is the ink line. What I found as I was writing was that if I kept a reasonably vertical pen barrel angle I wouldn't have many problems, but if I had a lower angle there would be a fair amount of skipping. I think that is a function of just how fine this pen is and that there isn't much room for error.


Additionaly, the pen barrel is to thin for any long term writing stints. Again, I think this is due to how fine the tip is. If you had a thin barrel and a wider tip, you could write in a more flowing style without as much stress. I felt like I was gripping pretty firmly to get the pen to do what I wanted it to do. The overall feel in the hand was fantastic though. The barrel is made completely out of metal, and I love how the knock is a conical shape as opposed to the more standard vertical walled design.


At $7.50, it isn't cheap to not completely love, but it has so many good things going for it I am going to keep it well within arms reach.


Click here for the XL review.

Posted on April 6, 2011 and filed under Ballpoint, Ohto, Pen Reviews.

Levenger 4x6 Note Cards Review

Levenger Note Cards


As I have mentioned before, I am a big fan of the index card. I like their sleek, simplistic nature, and there is just something satisfying about having that one single card to jot down your current ideas or to do list. At the time I ordered these last year, you could buy the 4x6 Levenger Note Cards in a 75-card sampler pack, containing 25 five each of grid, ruled, and blank cards. That option doesn't seem to be available anymore on the Levenger website, but the 3x5 sampler is, as are all of the 3x5 and 4x6 single design options, and all are worth checking out.


I tried out several different inks on these cards, and as you might have guessed, some performed better than others. All of the gel ink pens worked great, especially the sub-micro tips like the Pilot Hi-Tec-C 0.25mm and Uni-Ball Signo DX 0.38mm. There was no delay or skipping at all with any of them. The liquid ink and fountain pen ink didn't fare so well. While there wasn't much bleed through the card, there was some feathering as you can notice in the picture. I felt like I had to write really fast with them to make the lines decent.


Levenger Note Cards


One thing I didn't like is that the cards in the sampler pack were only printed on one side. I think if you order the standard personalized note cards or non-personalized note cards they are printed on both sides, but not every note card description stated that fact, only a few. If I was to reload my stock I would definitely want grids on both sides.


The cost of the note cards isn't exactly cheap at $28 per 500 ($5.60 per 100 cards) for lined or grid non-personalized cards, but there aren't a slew of options in the high-end note card realm either. If you are looking for an upgrade over your standard store brand cards, the Levenger Note Cards may be your best bet.

Posted on April 4, 2011 and filed under Index Card, Levenger.