I guess, varying line width is a feature that takes time to adapt to. I wonder how does cursive script looks when written with this nib?
I think it’s great for a very nice birthday postcard or something like that.
Comment on NPD/NID
jasongreen@lemmy.sdf.org 1 year ago
I haven’t done much of it. I have another Pilot Metropolitan with a medium nib which writes very smoothly. The stub nib isn’t as smooth, although my initial experiments have been on paper that’s not especially fountain pen friendly.
I also notice that I have to write more slowly with the stub nib or I get line widths that vary unexpectedly. Pilot calls it a calligraphy nib and I think it really is, rather than something you’d use for everyday notetaking. Perhaps those whose handwriting is more consistent have better results.
It’s too bad because I very much like how stub nibs let colored inks show. I’ve noticed that with narrow nibs, sometimes a colored ink doesn’t really “read” as colored when you look at it.
I guess, varying line width is a feature that takes time to adapt to. I wonder how does cursive script looks when written with this nib?
I think it’s great for a very nice birthday postcard or something like that.
coys25@lemmy.world 1 year ago
I find that they’re great for headings, titles, dates, etc - a little emphasis in my notes. With that said, my pilot metropolitan’s stub nib has also always been really scratchy too, and hard starts a lot. It’s always been one of my most disappointing pens.
One of my favorite stub nibs is a Jinhao 80 (Lamy 2000 clone, usually sub-$10). I swapped out the Jinhao nib for a Lamy 1.1 stub, and it writes like a dream!