Ranking my fountain pen collection

I’ve been thinking a bunch about my fountain pen collection lately. I’m up to around 25 pens (I should probably count or something) most of which are relatively cheap ones that I got with the idea of trying a specific thing: a different nib, brand, filling mechanism, body material, size, etc. At this point I know a lot more about my preferences than I did a year ago, so as a “new school year” kind of thing I wanted to record which pens I’m reaching for most and what’s working for me right now. That way I’ll have a record for next year when I want to see if things have changed.

Current Top Pens (S tier, Pokemon style)

A set of 5 founctain pens: Pilot E95S (burgundy), Pelikan Pura (teal with geometric pattern), Pilot Metropolitan (red with geometric pattern), TWSBI Eco (glow-in-the-dark green), Platinum Preppy Wa (blue with koi fish)
  1. Pilot E95S <medium> – My most expensive pen and only gold nibbed one. It gets an emotional bonus for being a birthady gift from my husband. I like the odd pockiet pen shape and it has a consistently lovely writing experience although I am afraid to put sparkle inks in it thanks to my experience with my other pilot pens. I don’t think it’s going to inspire me to upgrade to gold nibs everywhere but I’m very happy to have one for the experience.
  2. Pelikan Pura <broad> – SPARKLE PEN! This is my go-to shimmer ink pen now and I’ve only had it a few weeks so it feels a bit weird to put it here but I love it so much. Beautiful turquoise with a Y/snowflake pattern that reminds me of quilts but most importantly I like the grip more than the one on the Twist.
  3. Pilot Metropolitan <CM> – I really like the way my writing looks with their cursive italic nib, which is smaller than my other stub pens. If I could get a few more stubs at this width I would, it’s a perfect balance of fun to write with but usable even in smaller notebook spacings. I’ve seen it marked as a 1mm vs a 1.1stub but I think it’s more like a .7 in practice? This was one of the first pens I bought (alongside a TWSBI eco) and I still love it. Turns out I’m a big fan of the shiny metal look. Often when not in use this one still sits in front of my computer to look pretty (the rest are in a pen cup nearby when not in use). I still kind of want a bunch of the other colours in the retro pop line.
  4. TWSBI Eco glow green <medium, stub> – It glows in the dark, which makes it better than my other two TWSBI pens. This is one that sits on my nightstand so I can watch it glow when not in active use. It’s really taught me that it’s worth being finicky about getting a colour I like, since it’s functionally the same as my other TWSBI pens but I just love it more. I bought this with a medium nib but am swapping in a stub from my other eco.
  5. Platinum Preppy Wa Koi pattern <fine> – My todo list pen. I like the texture of the pattern under my fingers and the fact that the cap seals so well that I don’t have to worry much about it drying out. I don’t really like fine nibs in general but this one is nice and sometimes I want to write very tiny things in the flip book I use for daily todos.

Except for the Pura (which is very new) these are basically the pens I reach for most often. The Preppy and the Pilot E95S are almost constantly inked, the others rotate in regularly as I’m trying different inks and experimenting with other pens. I usually have 3-6 journal pens and 2 todo list pens inked and if I don’t rotate I’d basically never use any other pens.

A tier pens (as in, second rank)

These pens are good and write well but basically they aren’t as pretty so they don’t get used as often. These are the ones that sometimes go in my purse or on trips with me because I like the writing experience but I won’t be as sad if I lose one.

A pile of "second tier" pens: Ooly Duo (pink/orange), Jinhao Shark (grey), TWSBI Swipe (light blue), two Kaweco sports (dark blue and yellow), Platiunum Preppy Wa (red with gourds), Hongdian (red with maple leaves)
    • All the “less pretty” versions of what I have in my favourite pen list. So that’s my other TWSBIs (an ECO-T and a Swipe), my Pilot Kakuno and Varsity, my other Platinum Preppy. These all write well and consistently and get used sometimes but I’m gonna reach for the prettier one most times. I will give a shout out to the TWSBI Swipe which has a smaller converter instead of a piston so it gets used more often than the ECO when I’m using up ink samples.
    • Ooly Duo <fine?> – These are todo list pens that I impulse bought at the book store. They are refillable on the fountain pen side, not sure about the highlighter side. Great for todo lists, I like the colour, and the one I opened months ago is still going strong with no sign of drying out. Honestly, I’d recommend these to people looking for a fun starter fountain pen for planner use.
    • Jinhao Shark Pen <fine> – Nice todo list pen or purse pen. The shark look makes it especially good as kid distraction purse pen.
    • Kaweco sport (I have 2 bodies and and 3 nibs in M, B and stub) – I like these and I particularly like how easy it is to clean them and swap nibs, and the very small converters use about a month’s worth of ink at my current usage, so that’s nice. They get pulled out for travel and rotated in as purse pens because of their size.
    • Hongdian maple leaf pen <architect> – This is a lovely pen but it mostly loses out to the Pilot Metropolitan because I like it a bit better and they have a similar niche. I should probably get this pen into rotation more; it’s barely been used since I bought it.

    B Tier pens

    These pens are ones I like but have things that irritate me. They get rotated in for specific purposes but tend to get rotated out early because I’m tired of using them.

    Four "B tier" pens that I use but find annoying for various reasons: Pelikan Twist (red), Endless Phantom (black), Monteverde Ritma (blue), Nahvalur Original Plus (sparkle black)
    • Pelikan Twist <medium> – Fantastic sparkle ink pen, but the twisted triangular grip isn’t a good ergonomic fit for me so I actually use this with a gel wrap over the grip if I’m going to write for a while. I did finally have a sparkle get stuck in it but it recovered without needing a full nib cleaning. Still significantly better than my experience with the same inks in my TWSBI or Kaweco pens.
    • Endless Phantom retractable <fude, medium> – Dries out too fast for my regular use. I need a pen that can stay wet for 4 days because I rotate between journal colours, it only consistently stays wet for 2. I may yet find a use for this one because I like the fude nib I got with it, and I don’t have another fude I like except on my dip pen. May just come out on months when I have 2 colours going, or I may accept that it should move down into the forgotten tier.
    • Monteverde Ritma <flex> – This pen is so beautiful and I love the feel of the magnetic cap, but it is SO HEAVY. But it’s really pretty and while I know it’s not a “true” flex nib I really like the way this one can lay down extra ink so you can have fun with sheen and I’ve had some luck with shimmer too. I should probably rotate this one in a bit more often now that I’ve got a better idea of what inks suit it.
    • Nahvalur Original Plus <stub> – Good for travel, but this vacuum filler has such a large ink tank that I get tired of the ink long before I finish it even on a lazy non-full fill. Also, I don’t know if it’s a vacuum filler thing but it seems to dry up a bit mid-writing no matter how open I have things so I have to shake a bubble out of the way every once in a while.

    Everything Else

    And then there’s… everything else. Cheap pens that broke, things with fine/extra fine nibs that I hated (which is basically F/EF nib except the Preppy and the Ooly pens listed above). Most of these I should just give away, although there’s a couple in there that I haven’t really given a fair shake to because they didn’t wow me after one month (e.g. I should probably give the Conklin Durograph I got on super sale another go, I think it was a bad ink combo that landed it here).

    Things I’ve learned about my fountain pen preferences

    Preferred filling system: Converter. I usually have a few pens going for journal use and use less than 1ml of ink in each pen, so small converters are pretty great for me in terms of switching most of a palette of inks monthly. I don’t have any filling system I hate, though the jury is still out on the vacuum filler.

    Preferred nib: I like having a variety in my journal pens so I can sometimes write fast with an easy medium nib and sometimes take my time with a stub. Turns out I like broad and should probably try a double broad. I hate almost every extra fine nib or fine nib I’ve tried, and I now have enough todo list pens, so I should probably never buy another F or EF unless it’s something really special.

    Preferred size: I really love pocket pens and smaller pens, probably because I have small hands. I haven’t actually had ergonomic issues writing with bigger ones other than maybe my stupidly heavy Ritma but I definitely find myself wanting to go for smaller and lighter.

    Preferred materials: I really love shiny coloured metal. Anodized aluminum, I guess? I thought for sure I’d be more into the sparkly resins since that’s more like my taste in jewellery, and don’t get me wrong, they’re pretty, but I really love the bold colourful metallic pens. Might be partially because resins and whatnot are a bit heavier? Knowing this has helped me avoid buying those fancy benu pens.

    Preferred inks: I like a variety, and prefer saturated colours with less black and blue. I need less shimmer and more shading inks in my collection at the moment, I think, and I’d like to finish a few more samples so I have space for new ones in the box I use to organize them (I could get a second box but I probably shouldn’t). I really like smaller size bottles and samples so I can have more variety, so a lot of my preferred inks are just because they come in 30ml or smaller sizes.

    Preferred Notebooks: A5 size, smaller softcovers. Ideal size is probably under 100 pages. I’m waffling on dot grid vs blank but probably one of those. I didn’t love the more coated iroful paper for journal writing (though it was delightful for playing with inks) but everything else I’ve tried has been good. I’m currently enjoying the Clairefontaine Triomphe notebook I’ve got going. I do wish more notebooks came pre-numbered because I don’t love writing numbers myself but it’s a minor issue. I’ve given up on indexing since it turned out to be minimally useful and not fun for me, but I use the page numbers to estimate how long I have left in a given book and see if I’m writing a lot more or less than usual. I was previously more picky about the quality of the notebook cover itself because it impacted how easy it was to write in weird places (I don’t often use a table) but now that I have a slipcover and writing boards that’s been not such a big deal.

    Special editions: I’ve been trying to avoid getting really into the “collecting” part of fountain pens as a hobby, but looking at my top pens, it’s clear that “pretty” factors a lot into what I love the most, especially in cases where I have similar pens. So it’s good to know that it’s worth waiting for my favourite colour to come into stock or occasionally to splurge on a special edition if that’s the one calling my name. Which isn’t a surprise since one of my favourite scientific results is the “pretty things are more usable even across cultures” one but it’s nice to put it in action for myself.

    We’ll see how I feel about all these preferences in a year or two, but that’s where I’m at right now!

    Getting epubs to show emojis on kobo clara bw

    For some reason, eink screens work significantly better for me when I have even the mildest of headaches, so my ereader has been an important accessibility device for me since it now means I can read something while I’m waiting for my painkillers to kick in. I currently use a Kobo Clara BW and aside from some weird hiccups that were likely related to my dying hard drive rather than the device, it’s been pretty good. But occasionally, both the fanfic I download from AO3 and the more modern novels I read on the device have emoji characters, and those weren’t displaying. In a lot of cases, they don’t show any indication that they were there.

    I was reminded of this today while chatting with some fanfic people and decided it was time to try to fix it.

    Step 1: install an emoji font on the device.

    Kobo has a nice tutorial for this and it’s pretty straightforwards BUT it turns out that the default emoji font on my laptop (running fedora) is the Google Noto Color Emoji font which doesn’t work on my device. Won’t even show up as a font after I put it on the device.

    Step 2: Find the right emoji font that actually works.

    Thankfully, there exists a b&w version of this font and it’s free to download. I grabbed the “regular” one out of the zip file and installed it. Bam! Font exists on device.

    Step 3: Set the font in the document

    In theory, my Kobo has an option to add in “supplemental fonts” so it’ll try those if the main font doesn’t have the necessary characters. But that didn’t work at all, possibly because the font thinks it has the character and is displaying a blank in the epub file I tested? I really don’t know why except that it didn’t work.

    Setting the emoji font as the main font for the document does work, though, and the emoji displays just fine. It’s… not a great font, though. Lots of giant spaces between words.

    Step 4: ???

    The internet has a bunch of random speculation like “epubs only support 1 font” (which seems unlikely but not actually impossible) so it might be best to merge the emoji into a font I actually like for reading.

    It’s also possible that I could set up some automatic styling of my epubs in calibre that would make the fonts work better. Some people seemed to have ideas about that but a lot of it included styling each emoji and while I’m sure I can write a perl script for it I’m not convinced that’s the best choice. And, again, it requires me to know that there’s emoji in an epub before I transfer it to my device, which I don’t always know when I buy a book or grab a fanfic. I guess I could build a whole workflow to look for them, but it seems unlikely that’s what everyone else is doing? Surely I am not the only person who reads reasonably modern epubs with chat sections in them?

    For now, I have the font on my device and can flip over to it to see if I can see an emoji if I think one is missing, then flip back when reading with weird spacing irritates me. Not the worst, since often I can tell when the narrative has a chat/texting section that might include emoji. But that doesn’t really help when it’s not obvious from context.

    So… Not sure what my next step it, but that’s where I’m at and I’m going to give up and make some lunch. If anyone has found a good fix for this, I’d love to know!

    Kobo Clara BW showing the fanfic Unknown Number by ZeldaElmo.  At the bottom of the authors note there is an emoji character displaying correctly.  The rest of the text on the preface page looks weirdly spaced.
    Kobo Clara BW showing the fanfic Unknown Number by ZeldaElmo. At the bottom of the authors note there is an emoji character displaying correctly. The rest of the text on the preface page looks weirdly spaced.

    September 2025 Ink & Pen palette

    Back to school for my kiddo! And I bought the Pelikan Pura to replace my Pelikan Twist and I have zero regrets.

    Here’s this month’s stationary supplies:

    Stationary supplies for September 2025 including fountain pens, inks, stickers and paper products described in more detail in the post.

    Stickers

    • household stuff sheet from Eggtart Studio (via stickii; I think this was an advent sheet)
    • day to day icons sheet from Neko Mori Arts (via stickii, I think I bought this one specifically because I needed more habit stickers. Currently tracking writing days with these!)
    • Calendar from Mossy Pine (as usual; I got a whole year’s worth!)

    These were the intersection of being a little bit back to school-ish and also having the right colour vibe to go with the inks I wanted.

    Paper Products

    • Campus Diary free monthly calendar (new)
    • Clairfontaine Triomphe blank notebook (going since April 2025)
    • Koyuko campus notebook cover

    I already talked about my new calendar for the year, a Campus free monthly diary. It worked great with the fountain pen I used for numbers in September so I’m pretty happy with it so far, and I’ve got it slotted into the green cover (pictured above) on the opposite site of my current journal. Because they’re slotted in opposite sides rather than using strings or clips in the middle, there’s a bit of a gap in the centre. I was worried this would be a problem for writing but so far it seems to be fine. I’ll try some ink testing with dip pens on the back pages when I next do swatching.

    Three fountain pens and inks: Pilot Elite E95S with Diamine Aurora borealis, Pelikan Pura with Diamine Snow Globe, Pelikan Twist with Diamine Winterberry
    Three fountain pens and inks: Pilot Elite E95S with Diamine Aurora borealis, Pelikan Pura with Diamine Snow Globe, Pelikan Twist with Diamine Winterberry. The latter two have sparkles.

    Fountain Pens and Inks

    • Pilot Elite E95S <m> – Diamine Aurora Borealis (dark teal, carry over from last month)
    • Pelikan Pura <b> – Diamine Snow Globe (blue with blue shimmer)
    • Pelikan Twist <m> – Diamine Winterberry (red with red shimmer)

    The theme of this month is “omg I finally have pens that work with shimmer ink“. I loved these colours in the Inkvent 2024 calendar but was worried I woudln’t be able to use them.

    Since my blog post about the Pelikan Twist I managed to find someone selling the particular model of Pelikan Pura that I’d fallen for with the broad nib I wanted at a sale price, so I decided to jump on it even though I’m unemployed and should probably not be buying $100 pens. But I *love* this pen as much as I hoped I would and it fills a gap in my collection so I don’t feel like I made the wrong choice. The Pelikan Pura anniversary design with the little Y geometric snowflake shape and the pretty teal colour is fantastic, and obviously I’m very excited about having a feed that doesn’t clog up with sparkle. It has a round grip so no issues with that (the way there were with the Twist’s odd triangular grip). I expect this pen will be inked almost constantly since it will likely be my sparkle pen going fowards, and I have a lot of sparkle inks from Inkvent to use. Honestly, this pen jumped immediately into second place in my collection (behind my beloved Pilot Elite).

    After this month, the Twist will probably go back to being relegated as a sometimes pen because of the annoying triangle pen, although I’ve been playing with a coil grip thing on it that helps a bit and we’ll see how I feel about it after a month of use.

    Campus vs Traveler’s blank monthly calendars (size comparison)

    Back to school! As I’ve mentioned before, I’ve decided to use September as my “new year” because it works well with my kid’s school stuff. So it’s time to bid farewell to last year’s calendar, and set up a fresh one! I’m moving from the Traveler’s Notebook free monthly calendar to the KOKUYO Campus one, mostly because the latter is a bit bigger. (Spoiler: the squares are about 18% bigger.)

    Last year’s calendar was a Traveler’s Notebook blank monthly calendar. I love the idea of the system of inexpensive refill notebooks and accessories in a planner cover that stays with you, but I wasn’t sure the slimmer form factor was going to work for me.

    Traveler's Notebook blank monthly calendar with stickers on the front and a zippered pouch attached to the back cover.  The biggest sticker is a shiny aurora over a mountain.  On the upper left there is a smaller sticker of a fox-person sitting in lotus position with the caption "breathe" and in the upper right corner there is a sticker with a cat sleeping beside a witch had with the caption "today is a good day for getting cozy"
    Traveler’s Notebook blank monthly calendar with stickers on the front and a zippered pouch attached to the back cover. The biggest sticker is a shiny aurora over a mountain. On the upper left there is a smaller sticker of a fox-person sitting in lotus position with the caption “breathe” and in the upper right corner there is a sticker with a cat sleeping beside a witch had with the caption “today is a good day for getting cozy”

    Overall, I thought it was a great little calendar. I liked the textured cardstock cover, and I liked the whole setup even more when I picked up the zippered pouch that I have attached to the back cover and use for stickers.

    Traveler's notebook with plastic zipper pouch accessory attached to the back.  In this photo it's flipped open so you can see the sticker sheets I have stuck in there.
    Traveler’s notebook calendar with plastic zipper pouch accessory attached to the back. In this photo it’s flipped open so you can see the sticker sheets I have stuck in there.

    I particularly liked this format when travelling this summer, when I decided to use the blank back pages I hadn’t used for testing pens as the place for travel journal entries rather than dragging my regular A5 journal around with me. The tall-thin format is pleasantly easy to pull out of a bag.

    Traveler's notebook calendar with zippered pouch accessory attached to back cover.  This shows the loose stickers I have in the pouch.
    Traveler’s notebook calendar with zippered pouch accessory attached to back cover. This shows the loose stickers I have in the pouch.

    But when I’m *not* out of the house (which is most of the time) the calendar is just a little small. I use my monthly calendars for tracking a bunch of things, and while some days there’s enough space, that’s not true of all days when I have more stuff I want to record. I’ve also found that a lot of my favourite “small” stickers that I use as habit trackers take up a lot of space. (The dogs below were marking days that I’d spent time writing.)

    A peek inside my calendar showing fairly full calendar squares including some tracking runes, dog stickers, washi tape (marking longer events)  and a note marking my last day at Intel.
    A peek inside my calendar showing fairly full calendar squares including some tracking runes, dog stickers, washi tape (marking longer events) and a note marking my last day at Intel.

    Since I already use an A5 notebook for my journal, I decided I might as well match it for the calendar this year. Honestly I wanted to do that last year but a lot of the A5 options are Monday start and I thought that might be annoying when Sunday start is the more common format around here. The Traveler’s refill lets you fill in your own days of week. But this year I’m just gonna lean into Monday start. I conceptually like it better so I’ve changed my phone and stuff and we’ll see if I start having off-by-one errors.

    So my new calendar for the 2025-2026 school year is a KOKUYO Campus Diary Free Schedule monthly calendar. I should note that although this is a blank calendar, the year overview pages are Jan-Dec still so … I dunno, I guess I could cover the labels or just start in the middle, but I apparently barely used those overview pages last year so I’m guessing it’ll just remain blank or I’ll doodle on it or something. While the book itself is clearly bigger, the layout is such that each day’s square is a bit shorter but wider.

    Here’s some size comparisons:

    The KOKUYO Campus blank monthly calendar with the Traveler's Notebook blank monthly calendar sitting on top.  The Campus notebook is noticably wider and the squares are bigger, altough not as much as they might be since the Campus design leaves some blank space around the edge and the Traveler's does not.
    The KOKUYO Campus blank monthly calendar with the Traveler’s Notebook blank monthly calendar sitting on top. The Campus notebook is noticeably wider and the squares are bigger, although not as much as they might be since the Campus design leaves some blank space around the edge and the Traveler’s does not.

    I did some measuring too:

    Measurements comparing the squares in the Campus blank monthly calendar to the Traveler's one.  Numbers in post below this image.
    Measurements comparing the squares in the Campus blank monthly calendar to the Traveler’s one. Numbers in post below this image.
    • Traveler’s Calendar: 27mm wide by 33mm tall (total 891mm squared)
    • Campus calendar: 34mm wide by 31mm tall (total 1054mm squared)

    So the Campus notebook squares are about 18% bigger, I guess. I don’t know yet if that’ll be enough, but I’m unlikely to start carrying around anything bigger than an A5 notebook so if this doesn’t work out I’ll likely have switch to a weekly planner for at least some of my tracking. My calendar seldom leaves the house but I carry it from room to room and into the backyard in my knitting bag, and A5 is my preferred size for that.

    The Campus notebook is cheap enough that it won’t be a tragedy if I bail on it part way through the year. It looks like I paid $5.50 for the Campus one and $11 for the Traveler’s one, so it’s half the cost but also neither of them is exactly going to break the bank. And yes, I did intentionally buy this earlier in the year to help me resist getting too curious about fall planner launches.

    The cover is considerably less nice (thin enough that I will need a flat surface or pencil board to write in this, no pleasant texture) but I have a cover for A5 notebooks that should compensate for the thin cover, and I already own several pencil boards that I use with my current journal, so neither of those is deal breakers at this moment.

    Campus Monthly free Diary cover. It's grey and has a picture of some calendar squares on it.
    Campus Monthly free Diary cover. It’s grey and has a picture of some calendar squares on it.

    I’m also curious to see how I like the Campus paper. It’s supposedly decent enough for fountain pens, and although I only use those for date numbers currently, I’ll be using the pages in the back of the calendar for ink testing. I’m curious to see how I like it, mostly for the fun of testing a different paper. Although they do have a lot of other cute paper products geared at students that are quite reasonably priced, and I’m never sad to have options.

    Some things that did work well this year:

    • Thin washi tape for marking longer blocks of vacation and events. I love the way it looks even if it takes up a few precious mm of space.
    • Sticker “rewards” for habits. I’m amused by how much more rewarding these are than drawing tracking icons.
    • Switching to pencil for calendar writing. I tried pen for a while but didn’t love it.
    • Getting a pen shaped eraser so it fits in my pencil case better.
    • Getting a pencil board and using it also as a bookmark so my calendar always opened to the right page.
    • The zipper pouch for stickers.

    I may keep the zipper pouch for stickers even though it won’t be stuck on a notebook any more (I mean, I could, but I’m going to try having both A5 notebooks in a single cover so it would be kind of in the way).

    I haven’t actually written in the new calendar yet (I’ll be setting it up on labour day and I’m writing this the night before it posts) but I’m excited to try it out!