LA PEN SHOW – SUSAN WIRTH

Susan Wirth at the LA Pen Show 2014

Do you know Susan Wirth? If you don’t, you probably should.

Mr. Pentulant and I attended her Saturday seminar on handwriting and fountain pens at the LA Pen Show. My only complaint is that I wish the talk had been longer – or that we could have had dinner together – or both. She knows her stuff.

Susan’s advice is sound. She’s trying to sell pens and she gives advice about the things she sells. I trust her advice much as I trust the advice of Brian Goulet at Goulet Pens.

Susan Wirth (after the seminar)

On oblique nibs . . . Susan seemed to be saying that most people (70%?) cannot write properly with an oblique nib – it just won’t work. So, if you’ve had trouble, there you go.

On boutique inks . . . These inks are made to be pretty and do not take the pen into consideration. Susan says that if you don’t mind cleaning your pen regularly and don’t mind potential problems between the pen and ink, they are probably fine. She’s a fan of Parker Quink (who isn’t?) and Sheaffer – not so much a fan of Private Reserve, Noodler’s, and Organics Studios.

I get what she was saying – that Sheaffer and Parker made inks that would work beautifully in their pens. Private Reserve can’t do that because they don’t make pens. Instead, they make inks that will work wonderfully in some pens.

(You all know how much I love inks – I don’t plan to change my habits at all and if cleaning pens is the worst of the “jobs” I have, I’m not doing too bad.)

On cartridges -vs- bottles . . . I’m paraphrasing here, but bottled inks rule, cartridges drool. Oh, and ink your pens regularly – keep those cartridges full, your pen will write better and you won’t run out of ink as a surprise.

(I use cartridges when I travel sometimes. Probably will keep doing it because it’s better than nothing, yo.)

On buying pens . . . You have to try before you buy. Dipping isn’t sufficient as you cannot tell if there is a flow issue with the pen. The pen must be filled with ink and written with for a good test. Of course, most pen sellers aren’t going to let this happen. Her suggestion was that before you leave a pen show, ink that new (to you) pen up and take it for a spin. If it’s just plain wrong, return it to the seller.

Oh, and sit. Sit down to test pens. Most of us don’t write all day standing up.

On pen show admission fees . . . A girl after my own heart. Why in the world would a show that wants people to come in and buy pens charge so much for entry? The passes we splurged for were $65. Susan offered the few of us in the room the opportunity to buy from her and receive $30 off of a $100 purchase. Again, trying to sell things, but what a nice gesture, yes?

Pens for Sale by Susan Wirth

As part of the seminar, Susan had each person attending write a sentence or two. She didn’t want us to scribble our names, or (heaven forbid) write about a quick fox jumping over a lazy dog. She wanted us to write something that means something to us – something we would write in our every day life.

Mr. Pentulant was the fourth person to write – he borrowed my pen (seriously, Mr. Pentulant? Seriously? hehe) and scribbled a fancy math formula because that is really how he spends his day. I wrote a quote about marriage because my job at Brush Dance has quotes dancing around in my head.

At the end of the seminar, Susan collected the paper, looked it over (and here’s the fun part!), and proclaimed, “Number Five, very nice block lettering. Very architectural. You are an italics waiting to happen!”  That was ME! I was Number Five!! I am Number Five! (How geeky am I to be excited about this?)

There was also a professional calligrapher at the seminar. “Number Seven, you don’t need any help from me.” Ha!  (I actually got a peek at her handwriting – it was lovely.)

And then she made it around to Mr. Pentulant. “Number Four, we need to get you a very fine nib to help you with those formulas.” Uh. Oh.

I wish there had been time for every participant to get personal feedback. Most people attending didn’t have the splurge pass and wouldn’t be able to immediately head to the show floor for help. Blech.

Sharing her wisdom

After helping rearrange the conference room (don’t ask), Mr. P. and I went directly to Susan’s booth/table at the show, plunked ourselves into chairs, and declared ourselves in need of pens.

Susan pointed out the italic nib trays for me and said I didn’t need any help – Ha! She then found the finest of fine nibs for Mr. P., and he explained that as a lefty side-writer (number six here), he has had Major Trouble with fine nibs. I think she ignored him or something, I don’t know – I was off in my own little world.

I’d guess that we each tested five or six pens.

Vintage Sheaffer Pens from Susan Wirth

I learned that her person (what a terrible phrase – I wish I could remember his name ) services and grinds/shapes all of the nibs.

Love the cap on that blue pen – and the black one, too.

There was an incredible difference between each of the italic nibs I tested. One felt completely unacceptable to me – but I’m guessing that someone else would love it.

Yum.

Susan attends all of the major pen shows. If you don’t know exactly what you want/need, it’s worth a visit to see her. She doesn’t have much of an online presence (too bad).

Her pens are a bit more expensive. But. They write, they write well, and they come with advice and help from an expert. Paying a little more seems reasonable, right?

So. Did we buy? You betcha! Come back tomorrow to see an overview of all our LA Pen Show purchases. We bought – omg – ELEVEN pens.

In case you missed them, here are links to my other Pen Show posts:

General Overview – Part One
General Overview – Part Two

And, today is the very last day to enter to win an almost new bottle of Pilot Iroshizuku ink.

Thank you for reading – I know this is a longer-than-usual post.

xoxo,
Number Five!


LA PEN SHOW 2014 – GENERAL OVERVIEW (part 2)

The Shirt of Many Pens

Continuing my LA Pen Show pictures and report.  Here is a link to part one in case you missed it.

Also, I am still taking entries to my inky giveaway – if you haven’t entered already, please do.

Finally, just a reminder that you can click on pictures to see them in their wonderful full-sized glory.

And we’re off….

Pictures from LA Pen Show 2014

Russian Hand-Painted Fountain Pens

The pens above are gorgeous and hand-painted from Russia. Each pen on display was very different from the others (at least from my quick assessment) and one of them even had sterling silver inlay. From their sales director, Maksim Stulov, I learned that they have some limited editions and some one-of-a-kind pieces.  Here a link to their Facebook Page – when I tried to find their website, it wouldn’t load. Note that the maker’s name is ARTUS and there doesn’t seem to be a relationship to the Artus that was once Lamy.

Moving on…

Arizona Pen Company at the LA Pen Show

The pens above are made by George Butcher of Arizona Pen Company. I stopped by to talk with George twice and was thisclose to buying one of his creations. As soon as I update my wish list, you’ll find this pen on it. That stunning and unique green caught my eye.

George makes all of the pens himself. And he means it. Pen making is his passion and when he talks about what he does and how he does it, that comes through in a such a big way.

Those caps!

A Grouping of Vintage Fountain PensVacumatic, Anyone?

Look at That!
Yum!

That Demonstrator is a Vintage Waterman’s Lever Fill
An Assortment of Jumbo-Sized Fountain Pens

A Closer Look
Penchetta KS – Kustom Safari

The above is from Penchtta Pen & Knife. Do you see what they’ve done? The cap, nib, and section are from Lamy Safari fountain pens and the barrel is kustom from them. An interesting idea – perhaps a bit weird for me. I also wonder what the  trademark/copyright people at Lamy think about them creating a derivative product from their original and then selling that.

Next up are a few crowd shots. These don’t really show the number of people at the show, though. When it was super-crowded, I wasn’t aiming my camera much at all.

That’s it for today!

Tomorrow, I’ll be talking about Susan Wirth and my delightful experience with her.   Stay tuned!

LA PEN SHOW 2014 – GENERAL OVERVIEW

LA Pen Show 2014

Click on any image to see the big huge-tastic version.

On the heels of a fantastic business trip to Seattle, I spent last weekend in Los Angeles at the LA Pen Show.

I’ve attended other pen shows, but this may have been the biggest. It was impossible to see everything there even though Mr. Pentulant and I splurged for the fancy pass that got us in all three days. Still impossible.

I’ll have posts each day this week – so much to share with you. I’ll try to note where, who, when, etc., but there was so much that it was difficult to follow along.

Enjoy!

A Colorful Assortment

Delta Fountain Pens – Impressive Displays
Bexley Tuck-A-Way Pens from Dimefast

Parker Fountain Pens with Parker Quink
An assortment of vintage fountain pens and mechanical pencils.What is that on top?
Sheaffer Buckskin Tan Snorkel is the subject of this picture. Mmm.

Parker 45 Convertible Pen – New Old Stock (NOS)

The above image may be my favorite from the entire show. There is so much going on there. Pen, sketch pencil, knives, accessories – so much. This was the actually the first pen I considered buying. So red, so pretty, but I saw it early in the show and wanted to look around a big before deciding. A couple of days later, I remembered it again, but couldn’t find it again. Whomp, Whomp.

Onward . . .

 

Case after Case.

Tray after Tray

OK…that’s all for today. I’ll be back soon with more – so much more.

LA PEN SHOW 2014

LA Pen Show 2014

Hey everyone – I was at the LA Pen Show over the weekend – what a great weekend. I’ll have details, lots of pictures, and show and tell all about my great finds in coming days.

This trip was an “add on” to a business trip and I’m worn out.

Today, I’ll just remind about my fabulous giveaway – be sure to enter if you’ve not already!

xox

THROWBACK THURSDAY: Fountain Pen Edition

Last year around this same time, I was talking about DeAtramentis Gold.  I didn’t love it.

Let’s jump into the ole time machine and take a look at some things you may have missed…

The Unroyal Warrant looked at the Pilot 78G Fountain Pen.

Pen Addict was talking about a super-popular ink – Pilot Iroshizuku Kon-peki.

Notebook Stories had a..uh..well, just look at it for yourself. Crazy, right?

The gentle people over on FPN were talking about Sheaffer Skrip Blue and another person was asking for help identifying his fountain pen find.

So…Throwback Thursday….is it fun or stupid? Somewhere in between?  Help me decide.

The Fine Point

Lamy Safari Fountain Pens + Dudek Modern Goods

It’s been a busy week. Over at Brush Dance, we are looking at so much art for 2016 calendars (yes, already), selling so many 2015 calendars (yes, already), and talking about lots of new projects.

And here’s what’s going on with in fountain pens . . .

I received my Cube from Mike Dudek of The Clicky Post and Dudek Modern Goods. I ordered the least expensive item on his page – you know, just in case. You guys, it’s pretty incredible. As you can see from the photo above, Lamy Safari fit perfectly.

I was a little worried that the inside of the openings would be a too rough to trust that they wouldn’t scratch my collection, but that is not the case at all. The Cube feels weighty, solid in your hands and it’s perfectly smooth – perfectly perfect. Well, there is one tiny small issue – I actually bought this as a gift for Mr. Pentulant (who only dabbles in fountain pens, but needed a safe place to keep the few that he owns I let him borrow), and now The Cube is on my desk.

I have no affiliation with Dudek Modern Goods other than a sincere admiration for what he does.

Pen Addict reviewed the Retro 51 Tornado Black Fountain Pen. I don’t think this one will make it to my wish list.

The Well-Appointed Desk dressed the part for Handwriting Day. I might be jealous.

Gourmet Pens didn’t have anything to say about Akkerman Hofkwartier Groen.

Inkdependence reviews Namiki Blue. You like?

Oh..and, finally, I changed my name over on Instagram. I’m Pentulant there now, too, because that’s how I roll.

Have a good weekend.

Throwback Thursday: Fountain Pen Edition #1

It’s Throwback Thursday!

Last March, I was talking about the F-word, Cookie Butter, and flex writing. Check it out.

Let’s go back in time and see what others were talking about.

Beautiful Handwriting over on FPN

Pretty pretty ink review on Inkdependence

Rants of the Archer had a Lamy Nexx up for review. (Look at that color!)

The Missive Maven was talking about postal rate increases. Ug.

Writing by Hand – I dig that style.

Scription posted a cRaZy Field Notes experiment. I suggest watching the video rather than trying it at home yourself.

Fountain Pen Feeds on Instagram + Some From My Feed

Sailor 1911
Kyo Maki-e Fountain Pen

I’ve had the above pen (mine in the Chrysanthemum design) forever and only recently inked it. Oh my goodness, I don’t know why I waited so many years to give it a go. I’m in serious love with this pen. I filled it with Noodler’s Black (my go to for new pens) and it’s pretty terrific.  (By the way, I love a little nib creep – the smearing you see is from wiping after filling, not crazy nib creep.)

Pilot Metropolitan Fountain Pen

Two Rose Gold Fountain Pens

Above: (L) TWSBI 580 Rose Gold Fountain Pen  (R) Montblanc Starwalker Fountain Pen

I’m a believer.

Imagine That! 

Lily, Sammy Fae Baker, Bella

Best picture of the dogs I’ve gotten in a long time. Reminder to self: hold their attention with cookies.

Montblanc Winter Glow Ink

Pelikan Edelstein Amber Ink

The New Brush Dance Calendar

That’s me on Instagram.

And here are some others that regularly post fountain pens on Instagram.

MrMikeDudek

PJay55

PabloGarq

EdJelley

HeyMatthew

Colonel4God

Aleks111

FoxChoc

WriteGear

PenAddict

Who are you following?

FRIDAY FOLLOW: Instagram

If you’re not on Instagram, you’re really missing something.  
In no particular order, here are some of my more recent Instagram images . . . 
The Waterman Edson Twins (they are not identical)
VW swag for Baby O (because, really, how cute is this?)

An inky project I’m working on

Love #inkinthesink

Right?

My TWSBI Collection makes me swoon just a bit.

Strawberry Ice Cream

Doesn’t everyone meal plan with a #wetnoodle?

My beloved Montblanc Boheme collection.

I opened Mr. Pentulant’s textbook, took this picture, and then promptly closed the book.  

And here’s a listing of just some of the people I follow…

Gourmet Pens

Ed Jelley

Ellina

Pablo Garcia Melnick

Gerald Taylor – aka MyCofeePot

Chrissy Sparks

PenAddict

What I love about Instagram is that most of the people I follow post more than just pens. It’s a real glimpse into the person and what is important in his/her life.

Here’s my Instagram link.  Where is yours?

REVIEW: Penvelope 13 from Franklin-Christoph

I shared a tiny preview of my Penvelope 13 from Franklin-Christoph earlier this month and am back now for a more detailed look.

I had originally ordered two of the Penvelopes that would hold six pens each. Unfortunately, they only had one to send me right away – so I was offered the option of waiting another week or upgrading to the “Lucky 13” at no charge.  I took the upgrade offer and received it in the Black Crocodile style (pictured here). The P-6 (which I don’t have pictures of yet) is Boot Brown.

As advertised, it holds 13 pens.

Mr. P snuck one pen out of the holder because he’d ordered a super-secret surprise pen for me (more on that another day).

Without any kind of stretching or straining, it holds some of my biggest pens. I tested with a Montblanc 149 – no problem. The two pens on the left are Waterman Edsons – again, no problems at all. No touching, no rubbing.

Magnetic Snap Closure
High quality interior fabric
Impeccable Stitching

I’m in love.  Fashion and function. High quality. Excellent customer service (they even called to check in after the items were received). Highly recommended.