Misfill, Every Second Counted Edition

Each week in Refill, the Pen Addict Members newsletter, I publish Ink Links as part of the additional content you receive for being a member. And each week, after 10 to 15 links, plus my added commentary on each, I'm left with many great items I want to share. Enter Misfill. Here are this weeks links:

Artists Quarantine With Their Art Collections (Hyperallergic)

Personal Pens: Leonardo Messenger (SBREBrown)

Limited Edition Maki-e and Abalone Raden Collier! (Edison Pen Co)

Joy Division: all of their songs, ranked! (The Guardian)

2020 Mid-Year Recap: Five Favorite Products from the Year So Far (The Gentleman Stationer)

These Daily Drawings Of A Young Artist And Her Little Brother Are A Bright Spot During Some Dark Days (Design you Trust)

DJ Shadow on the Music That Made Him (Pitchfork)

Blackwing Volume 3 Ravi Shankar (Wonder Pens)

Black Creativity Matters: How agencies can push for real change in the creative industries (Creative Boom)

Schon DSGN keeps the good stuff coming (UK fountain pens)

18111 Gold Dancing Feathers in Cosmic Storm (dapprman)

DIY: Make Your Own Pen Flush (The Well-Appointed Desk)

Taking a (Slim) Chance with the Artisan Fountain Pens Classic Slim (Penquisition)

This Woman Inspired One of the First Hit Video Games by Mapping the World’s Longest Cave (OneZero)

Ink Review #238: J. Herbin Emerald of Chivor (Fountain Pen Pharmacist)

Star Control 2 Was Designed And Built Entirely On Hand-Drawn Flowcharts (Kotaku)

Fountain Pen Quest Trail Log – July 19, 2020 (Fountain Pen Quest)

Early thoughts on the Pilot Capless, matt black. (Fountain pen blog)

review: kaweco smokey grey (ink between the teeth)

Want to catch the rest, plus extra articles, reviews, commentary, discounts, and more? Try out a Pen Addict Membership for only $5 per month!

Posted on July 19, 2020 and filed under Misfill.

Rotring 600 0.7 mm “Madder Red” Mechanical Pencil Giveaway Winner

The Rotring 600 is one of the great designs in the stationery world, and I was curious if they could pull off adding three new colors to the traditionally-styled original lineup. I think they did. I have the 0.7 mm Rotring 600 Madder Red Mechanical Pencil to give away this week, and the winner is:

Rotring 600 0.7 mm “Madder Red” Mechanical Pencil Giveaway Winner

Congrats Mark! I’ve sent you an email to collect your shipping address.

Posted on July 18, 2020 and filed under Rotring, Giveaways.

Nakaya Neo Standard Shinobu Blue with Elastic Nib: A Review

Nakaya Neo Standard Shinobu Blue with Elastic Nib: A Review

(Susan M. Pigott is a fountain pen collector, pen and paperholic, photographer, and professor. You can find more from Susan on her blog Scribalishess.)

Ahhhh. Nakayas. Nobody warned me that buying one Nakaya would lead to buying another and another and another. I honestly thought I might own one or two at most because they are freaking expensive. But then I scroll through the Nakaya listings at Nibs.com, swallow hard, contemplate the beauty, and rationalize why I must have another one.

The Nakaya Shinobu in blue is a pen I've coveted for a long time. I was entranced by the fern pattern carved delicately into the ebonite. One evening, depressed over signing my terminal contract as a professor, I pressed the "buy" button on the Shinobu at Nibs.com. The next day, remorseful, I sent an email, requesting that they cancel my order. But during the pandemic, no one was monitoring emails, and two days later, I received confirmation that my pen with its special elastic nib was ready to ship. What's a girl to do--send it back? Are you kidding???

Nakaya Neo Standard Shinobu Blue with Elastic Nib

All Nakayas come in a softwood box lined in red velveteen and wrapped in a pen kimono.

Nakaya Neo Standard Shinobu Blue with Elastic Nib Packaging

When I removed the Shinobu from its kimono, I gasped, stunned, as always, by the craftsmanship and beauty. I took the pen into our Florida Room to see it in sunlight. It glows as if it were lit from within.

Nakaya Neo Standard Shinobu Blue

The base color of the pen is black urushi. Nibs.com describes the crafting process:

Many stages go into making the special surface of this pen. First layers of urushi lacquer are applied over the natural hard rubber. Then the pattern is hand engraved into these layers followed by an application of blue pigment, first applied then removed leaving traces in the carved crevices.

Look at the exquisite details:

Nakaya Neo Standard Shinobu Blue Barrel
Nakaya Neo Standard Shinobu Blue Cap Detail
Nakaya Neo Standard Shinobu Blue Close up

Even the grip is carved:

Nakaya Neo Standard Shinobu Blue Grip

I was excited to find the Shinobu in the Neo Standard, a model I did not yet own. The Neo Standard is lightly tapered at both ends, and the barrel has a subtle curve.

Nakaya Neo Standard Shinobu Blue Shape

This is a medium-sized pen, measuring 5.9 inches/150 mm capped and 5.3 inches/135mm uncapped. You cannot post the cap. Although the barrel at its widest is about 15 mm, the grip is only 10 mm. Ebonite pens are not heavy. The Neo Standard weighs 24 grams capped and 20.5 grams uncapped and inked. The pen is perfectly balanced in the hand.

Nakaya Neo Standard Shinobu Blue Uncapped

I chose a medium soft, two-toned nib and requested the elastic modification. An elastic nib is created by cutting out notches on each side of the nib. This customization gives the nib a bounciness similar to a paintbrush. It lends the nib some line variation, but not as much as a flex nib.

Nakaya Neo Standard Shinobu Blue Nib
Nakaya Neo Standard Shinobu Blue Elastic Nib

Out of all the different nib styles, the elastic nib is my absolute favorite. It is like writing with a paintbrush, but with much more control. The nib makes writing soothing and pleasurable. It's meditation with a pen!

Nakaya Neo Standard Shinobu Blue Writing
Nakaya Neo Standard Shinobu Blue Writing Close Up

The base price for a Nakaya Neo Standard Shinobu in blue is $1,800. Yup. This baby is expensive. You will pay more for a two-toned vs. single-toned nib, and the elastic modification adds $100 to the total (_so_ worth it!)

I was lucky that Nibs.com had this pen in stock when I decided to click "buy." A pen like this can take twelve or more months to arrive if it is not in stock. I promise that it's worth the wait, though!

(I purchased this Nakaya Neo Standard Shinobu in blue with my own funds.)

Posted on July 17, 2020 and filed under Nakaya, Fountain Pens, Pen Reviews.