Pen7 - Stunning Ebonite Pocket Pens (Sponsor)

Sometimes we make compromises for the sake of convenience. A pocket knife isn't really much use in the kitchen, and a weekend off is hardly a vacation. But the Pen7 compact pocket fountain pens aren't one of those compromises-they're just great pens in a small package.

At 95mm when capped, these ebonite pens fit just about anywhere you might want to put them, but when the barrel is reversed, they extend to a full size capped length of 130 mm. With a section width increasing from 11.5 mm to 12.8 mm as it seamlessly transitions into the barrel, and without the interruption of annoying exposed threads, they transform into a full size fountain pen that measures up against any you might have tried.

Made entirely of hand-shaped and mirror polished ebonite, they have a beautiful feel in the hand and offer a great writing experience, however you prefer to hold them. The concave curved cap from 13.5 mm to 16 mm offers those with smaller hands a narrower form, while those with bigger hands will find the thicker part of the cap sits perfectly for comfortable extended writing sessions.

With over 160 colour variations in single or two coloured ebonite combinations, and a constantly updated range of marbled ebonite designs, there is bound to be a pen that ticks all your boxes. All pens ship with a Bock #6 nib and take a single short international cartridge. Manufactured in the UK, Pen7 pens can be shipped worldwide, and with prices starting from approximately $179 they offer some of the best value in hand-crafted ebonite pens you're going to find anywhere. That should be the sort of convenience we can all embrace.

My thanks to Pen7 for sponsoring The Pen Addict this week.

Posted on August 22, 2022 and filed under Featured Sponsor.

Zebra bLen Ballpoint Pen Review

Zebra bLen Ballpoint Pen Review

I was late to the Zebra bLen party.

When the 2020 OKB48 results dropped, a pen I had never heard of slotted in at number two. New pens sneak up on me all the time, but I would expect them further down the 48-pen list. Not directly into the number two spot.

I had a friend reach out at the time and offer to send me over one to check out, as they were only available in Japan on launch. And it was good. I liked it. And then I misplaced it, or maybe even gave it away. Why I didn’t slot it into the review queue at the time is odd for me, but now that the bLen has become even more popular, and propagated worldwide, it is time to correct that miss.

Zebra bLen Ballpoint Pen Review

The marketing of the bLen revolves around two things: Zebra’s emulsion ink technology, and unique barrel construction.

Originally launched as Z-Mulsion ink, this was Zebra’s answer to the hybrid ballpoint ink technology popularized by the Uni-ball Jetstream, and later, the Pilot Acroball. What hybrid ballpoint inks offer is a far superior ink formula over the purely oil-based traditional ballpoint ink. It’s smoother, darker, cleaner, and more consistent. In short, this ink is far better than typical ballpoint ink.

Zebra bLen Ballpoint Pen Review

Z-Mulsion didn’t exactly take off for Zebra on it’s first go-round. But going back to the drawing board and building around a solid refill put them on the path to a better product in the end.

In collaboration with Japanese-Canadian designer Saki Oki, the bLen barrel was engineered for silence. How often have you heard that in pen design? And if you haven’t, you know exactly what it means. Often times when using pens, primarily retractable pens, there is rattling going on in the barrel. It could be from the tip area where the refill is exposed, or it could be in the internals where the knock mechanism resides. The bLen was designed to eliminate all of that sound and vibration.

Zebra bLen Ballpoint Pen

And it works. The Zebra bLen barrel is lightweight, and solid. The knock engages cleanly, and is quiet. The tip is cushioned, and smooth. Overall, Zebra delivered on their design ideas.

That design allows the refill to shine. Zebra always had something with the Z-Mulsion ink, but it didn’t land from a design and marketing perspective. Now with this unique barrel design, the refill performance is able to be noticed. I have an 0.5 mm Blue and an 0.7 mm Black in hand to test, and they are fantastic to write with. The 0.7 mm will win the popularity contest due to the tip size, but I, of course, have a soft spot for the 0.5 mm.

Zebra bLen Ballpoint Pen

As much as I like this ink (especially the Blue 0.5 mm,) I do think both the Uni-ball Jetstream and Pilot Acroball do it slightly better. If the Jetstream was a 9 out of 10 ink performance, the Acroball is an 8/10, and the bLen is a 7/10. Still good, but a clear third place for me. The barrel practically makes up the difference, though. It’s that good.

The lines on both pens are consistent, and fine. Compared to similar tip sizes in gel and rollerball pens, the line from ballpoints is narrower on the page. The ink doesn’t spread on the page like the other two, despite the same manufacturing size of the tip.

Zebra bLen Ballpoint Pen

I did see a little bit of what I call “spidering” in some of my writing, more from the Black 0.7 mm tip than the Blue 0.5 mm. If you look at the word “meaning” above, you will see a strand of ink from the bottom left of the A, to the top of the I-like a spider’s web.

I’m really enjoying the Zebra bLen now that I’ve given it some dedicated usage time. At $2.50, they are competitively priced, and have become more widely available. With the success Zebra has seen with this pen barrel, they launched a gel ink bLen option as well, which I’ll be looking at soon.

(JetPens provided this product at no charge to The Pen Addict for review purposes.)


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Zebra bLen Ballpoint Pen
Posted on August 22, 2022 and filed under Zebra, bLen, Ballpoint.

Misfill, What’s On My Desk 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:

What's on my desk? August 2022 (The Well-Appointed Desk)

Travelling with ink: Suffolk, August 2022 edition. (Fountain pen blog)

Opus Cineris The Harmonic Nib Series - a handmade gold fountain pen nib by Anabelle Sophie Hiller (Gourmet Pens)

The Paper Mind Cosmo Air Light Hardcover Notebook Review (Blake's Broadcast)

Industrial Designer's "Everlasting Pencil" Lands $500K on Kickstarter (Core77)

Scratchy Pencil-and-Ink Drawings by Jon Carling Conjure Mythical Beings and Surreal Sorcery (Colossal)

Case Review: Galen Leather Magnum Opus 12-Pen Case in Two Different Options (The Gentleman Stationer)

Retro writing 11 – Casio HW-300JS (Art vs. Entropy)

Ink Review #1882: J Herbin 1670 Shogun (Mountain of Ink)

Kickstarted – BIGiDESIGN Dual Side Click Pen (The Poor Penman)

surprise: diamine blue black (a fleeting ripple)

Papier Plume Sno-Ball Ink Set (Figboot on Pens)

The Art That Inspired Joan Didion Goes to Auction (Hyperallergic)

Cult Pens Diamine Flower Inks Set – Petunia (dapprman)

Bringing another newly tuned nib into the fold (mnmlscholar)

The best art books to enjoy in the summer of 2022 (Creative Boom)

Journal Sketch: Carousel and Cold Coffee (Writing at Large)

Lennon Tool Bar Shuise on Rhodia (Inkcredible Colours)

All the unknowns are outlined (Claudia Dawson)

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 August 21, 2022 and filed under Misfill.