Once upon a time, about three years ago, I bought a Scribo Piuma, Altrove because (1) it was pretty, (2) it was on sale, and (3) it had a flex nib. Nib options were limited so the only flex option left was the 14kt gold Broad Flex. I clicked buy and anxiously waited for it to arrive. I inked it up right away with the best ink match I had and I was whelmed - not over-, not under-, just whelmed. I think part of it was the not-quite-as-perfect ink match as I had thought, but I just wasn’t loving writing with it. (Sorry, no picture of this first inking because I really didn’t enjoy the combination, despite using it for a few weeks.)
Everyone had been raving about the Scribo and their amazing nibs, especially their flex nibs and I couldn’t understand why I wasn’t raving about it too. I was so unexcited about it that I thought it had to be the ink. So I changed inks, and while I liked it better, it still wasn’t good enough. Mind you, it’s not the nib, it was a nice writer, it was smooth, it was juicy, it was flexy. So let me be very clear that it’s not because it was a bad nib. The main thing about flex nibs is line variation, and while there was line variation, the fact that it was a broad nib meant that it gives you a broad-to-broader line, instead of the thin-to-broad lines of traditional flex dip nibs, which was more what I wanted.
I didn’t want to turn this Broad into a Fine or Extra Fine, but thought maybe it could use a little slimming down. So I had Gena Salorino of Custom Nib Studio grind it down to a Medium Broad, while maintaining its current level of flexiness and feel (aka its smoothness on the paper). Gena did a great job, which made the nib feel a lot better, but I still didn’t love it. I eventually set the pen aside in the “last ditch pile”, a pen purgatory, if you will, where I would decide if I would keep it or sell it. It would remain in this pile for over a year while awaiting its fate.