Posts filed under Kickstarter

First Look: The Steel & Flint Pen

Mike Hancox from Steel & Flint was kind enough to arrange an early prototype of the Steel & Flint Pen, which recently launched on Kickstarter. If you are looking for a high-quality pocket pen option then you are going to want to check this one out.

Two things struck me when I first opened the package: The pen is smaller and lighter than I was expecting looking at the pictures online. That doesn’t mean this is a small and light pen necessarily, but my brain was feeding me different information before its arrival.

The size and weight of the Steel & Flint Pen play to its advantage as a pocketable, on the go pen. The aluminum barrel keeps the weight down, and the rounded ends allow for it to slide easily in and out of a pocket or a bag. It is clipless pen, so don’t expect to attach it anywhere, but I think that is a feature of this style of pen, not a negative.

The pen is available in three anodized finishes - Silver, Black, or Champagne - and each are bead blasted to give it a bit of matte/satin feel. The finish feels nice in the hand and gives it enough texture to keep it from feeling slick. The knurled grip is a wonderfully done as well. It is refined and feels almost smooth across the top, but keeps your grip in place when writing.

One concern about the finish I have is how the constant capping and uncapping will have on the look of the barrel. Will friction stripes start to appear from metal on metal sliding? And will I care? I imagine at some point marks will start to show up, and I probably won’t care. This is a pocket pen, so it is going to get scratched and dinged as it is. Only time will tell.

When this pen was launched, one of the main comments I heard was that this pen is a copy of the CW&T Pen Type-B. As one of the biggest fans and supporters of the Pen Type-B on the planet I can safely say these pens are almost nothing alike aside from the general silhouette.

The sleeve on the Pen Type-B is designed for an air-tight, zero tolerance fit, which gives it a unique capping and uncapping feel. The Steel & Flint sleeve is essentially a cap. Pull off and push on, with a magnet snap pulling it tight at each end. It feels good and works well. It’s also shorter, narrower, and about 1/3 of the weight of the Pen Type-B. It is a totally different pen in my mind.

If I were to give it a comparison to other pens, it’s more like a mash up between the look and feel of the Baron Fig Squire and the technical machining and size of the Karas Kustoms EDK. I love both of those pens, and the Steel & Flint Pen is right there with them.

Refill wise, the Steel & Flint Pen takes Parker compatible (International G2) refills. While not my favorite option, it does ship with the a Schmidt Easyflow 9000M, which is probably the best of the bunch. I’m always on the lookout for something finer though.

As far as being the “World’s Finest Soft-Close Magnetic Pen”, ok I guess so when it is a competition of one. I can caveat myself into being the “World’s Finest Bradly Stephen Dowdy” too, which doesn’t tell you much.

At $69, it is priced fairly and I have backed it myself. Post-Kickstarter pricing will be closer to, or over, $100, which gives me pause. I do see a future where other materials could be introduced to the Steel & Flint offerings which could justify a three-digit price.

My thanks to Mike and Steel & Flint for sending me this pen at no charge for the purposes of this review.


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Posted on November 21, 2016 and filed under Steel & Flint, Kickstarter.

Review: The Lanier Briefcase From Nock Co.

Matthew Morse is a good friend of Jeff and I, and luckily for us, he likes his bags and backpacks. Sending a Lanier to him to review was a no-brainer, especially because he will tell it to us like it is. Does it work for his carry? Is it built well, and in a thoughtful manner? What is it missing? It's all in there.

Thanks for the review Matthew! Check it out here, and all the awesome photography that went with it. Wow.

And BUY THE LANIER! Only 14 days left...

Posted on October 5, 2016 and filed under Kickstarter.