Tombow Mono Graph Fine Mechanical Pencil Review

Tombow has been on quite the run with their mechanical pencil lineup for the last several years, and that run continues with the Tombow Mono Graph Fine Mechanical Pencil.

This pencil has everything I am looking for in a drafting-style pencil: a lightweight barrel with the weight balanced toward the front, good visual clearance of the tip, and a comfortable grip section. The Mono Graph Fine checks all of those boxes, and adds in Tombow’s amazing eraser - a twist eraser, at that - a solid clip, and a clean aesthetic.

What’s not to love? For me, I can’t think of a single thing.

The only question I had after unboxing this pencil was how the grip was going to feel. Would it be too smooth and slick? Is that weird depression really needed? It’s definitely not too slick. According to the product description, it is coated with a “grippy soft-touch finish,” and while I’m not sure that is the proper technical term, it is an accurate description of how it feels. I’ve had no slipping so far.

The low profile notch is nice in the fact that it doesn’t get in the way if your fingers are not seated in it perfectly at all times. Mine aren’t, and I never noticed it. I tended to start right in the middle of it, but my fingers move up and down the grip and the notch edges are so minimal it never bothered me. In fact, I never noticed it while writing at all.

One design decision companies make at this price point is to use a metal grip section in combination with a plastic upper barrel, and that’s what Tombow has done here. This gives the pencil that front-weighted feel that technical pencils need for good line control. You know, for all of the engineering I do. Still, this is expectation for this design, and it feels great in hand.

As someone who is eraser agnostic when it comes to any type of pencil, I would be remiss if I didn’t mention how fantastic Tombow’s erasers are. I used this one more than I hoped, and it performed brilliantly. Most, if not all, of the graphite was removed from the page, and no eraser dust was left behind to brush off - it sticks to the eraser.

Top to bottom: Rotring 600, Tombow Mono Graph Fine, Pentel Sharp P205, Spoke Model 6.

Like with many of their other pencils, the eraser is part of a twist mechanism to extend and retract as needed. A feature of the Mono Graph Fine is that when the eraser is extended, the pencil knock locks in place so you don’t accidentally extend the lead when erasing. Does anyone press down that hard with their eraser to have this problem? Chalk this feature up to marketing, not necessity.

The final piece of the puzzle is price, an area that Tombow is extremely competitive in. The Mono Graph Fine is $13.75, which positions it perfectly against the competition. While I’d go as far as saying their other pencils such as the Mono Graph Grip Shaker and Mono Graph Lite are underpriced, this model is bang on price-wise. And, like those other two pencils, it would make a great addition to your mechanical pencil collection.

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


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Posted on February 19, 2024 and filed under Tombow, Mechanical Pencil, Pencil Reviews.

Misfill, Use It For Life 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:

Use it for Life (Dime Novel Raven)

It's Time for the California Pen Show! (February Mid-Month Update) (The Toasty Times)

Central Renga (Inkcredible Colours)

Tony Bechara Creates Chaos With Grids (Hyperallergic)

Ink Review #2498: Kobe 79 Tamon Kakitsubata (Mountain of Ink)

Notebook Comparison: 120gsm and 180gsm Paper (The Well-Appointed Desk)

The Wet Pen Inks: Deception Pass and Elliott Bay (A Gathering of Curiosities)

Ten of the Most Expensive Arts & Art Supplies in the Worlds: Japanese Bonsai Scissors & Calligraphy Brushes, Tunisian Dye Made from Snails and More (Open Culture)

Picture a Day: Feb 17 (Cheryl Lindo Jones)

Changing what EDC means (Everyday Commentary)

Journaling Series: On Finishing a Journal (Writing at Large)

Why call it a Nib? (Chronicles of a Fountain Pen)

Illustrator Khloe Baker draws the people and communities that make Leeds food market special (Creative Boom)

Shibui North Pocket Fox Titanium Kraken (Figboot on Pens)

FP 101: Converters are for cool kids (idipbananasintocoffee)

Aurora Il Viaggio Segreto in Italia Mantova Review (SBREBrown)

It’s all because of those Thomassons! (Art vs. Entropy)

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 February 18, 2024 and filed under Misfill.

Platinum Mixable Mix-Free Fountain Pen Ink Giveaway Winner

Want a new fountain pen ink, but can’t decide on the color? Why not make your own! That’s what Platinum Mixable Mix-Free Fountain Pen Ink allows you to do. There are 9 different colors available for you to play with, and I grabbed three of them - Aqua Blue, Cyclamen Pink, and Sunny Yellow - for you to mix and match with (here is a recipe chart.) The winner of this set of three inks is:

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

Posted on February 17, 2024 and filed under Giveaways.