I had the pleasure of joining the Erasable Podcast crew last week to discuss my recent fascination with wooden pencils. This led to a lot of great conversation around the stationery discovery process, like when I realized fountain pens would work for me and my writing style.
That discovery process went something like this:
- I have no use for fountain pens. They can’t write how I like to write.
- They are messy - who wants to deal with that?
- Wow, that ink color is neat. Look how fine that line is!
- I should buy one to try.
- That was ok, but not perfect for me. Let me research more.
- Japanese Extra Fine! And orange ink!
For wooden pencils, the process was shockingly similar:
- I have no use for wooden pencils. They can’t write how I like to write.
- They are messy - who wants to deal with that?
- Wow, that pencil barrel is cool. Look how sharp that point is!
- I should buy one to try.
- That was ok, but not perfect for me. Let me research more.
- I understand the hardness scale! And rarely have to sharpen!
This is why The Pen Addict exists in the first place. My journey to find the best micro-tip gel ink pen is what got this blog started all of those years ago, and the discovery process never ends. I’m always on the lookout for great pens, pencils, inks, and paper. And, I am willing to step outside of my traditional comfort zone to see what else is out there that could be better for me than what I have been using.
Sometimes it is a $200 fountain pen with a unique nib. Other times, like this one, it is a $1 pencil that fits me and my writing style perfectly.