You can purchase a Pineider “La Grande Bellezza” in six stunning colors: Hematite Grey, Lapis Blue, Malachite Green, Rodolite Red, Dolomite Green, and Sunset Red from Vanness Pens for $398.00. A seventh version called “The Key of Heaven” is white and gold resin with a two-tone 18k nib. It’s a limited edition and costs $638.00. Nib sizes range from extra fine to broad with a stub option as well.
I must say that overall I am very impressed with this Pineider fountain pen. The marble-infused resin is simply gorgeous, and the pen design is outstanding. The nib feels very much like my vintage Montblanc 146 (which cost a ton more than the Pineider does), though the skipping is frustrating. Nevertheless, I’ve grown quite fond of this pen, and I will likely purchase one for my collection.
Pros
- “La Grande Bellezza” is truly a beautiful pen. The resin and marble dust create a beautiful combination of color, strength, and chatoyance. This pen does not feel like a resin pen. It honestly feels much more like celluloid but at half the cost.
- All the extra details make this pen feel special. The finial reminds me of Visconti finials. The goose quill clip is exquisite and functional. The cap band, while wide, suits the pen, and even though I’m not fond of the “brown fox” quotation, the print is so tiny that it is unobtrusive. The silver medallion at the base of the pen is another handsome touch.
- The pen feels wonderful in the hand. At 23 grams, it has good heft, and it is well balanced. The metal grip is shaped perfectly to keep your fingers in place and the band of textured metal stops your fingers from slipping.
- I love the nib on this pen. It is springy and soft and it provides good line variation if you press into it. Of all the modern flex nibs I’ve tried (and I’ve tried many of them), this nib offers the best vintage-like flex. Again, it’s not a wet noodle or superflex, but in terms of how it feels when you write, it comes very close to writing like a vintage nib. Compared to the Aurora 88 flex pens and the Wahl-Eversharp Oversized Decoband, which also feature flex nibs, Pineider’s “La Grande Bellezza” is much less expensive.
- The magnetic cap is quite convenient, especially if you open and close your pen quite often.
Cons
- This Pineider “La Grande Bellezza” fountain pen is a sizable investment at nearly $400.
- While the nib is soft and springy, providing nice line variation, unfortunately it skips, especially on downstrokes, after about a page and a half of writing. This seems to be related to the amount of ink in the converter. In order to keep the ink flowing, I had to manually push the ink down into the feed using the converter. Depending on the wetness of the ink, I had to do this every few paragraphs (dry ink) or every second page or so (wet ink).
- Although the magnetic cap is convenient, it does not seem to provide a tight enough seal. This allows ink to evaporate over time resulting in a dry nib and an empty converter.
- You can post the cap on this pen, but it rattles noisily and throws off the balance.
(Vanness Pens loaned this product to The Pen Addict for review purposes.)