I’ve been on an orange kick. It all started innocently enough back in May, and then over the last few days, I’ve inked seven pens with seven different orange inks. CrAzY!
I won’t have room to go into great detail on each ink here, but let’s explore a little, shall we?
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Pilot Iroshizuku Fuyu-gaki Writing Sample |
Pilot Iroshizuku’s Fuyu-gaki runs a bit toward the red side of orange. It writes wonderfully, doesn’t display much shading, and is an all-around nice ink.
Fun with ink splatters. I did these on Word Cards that I got from Jet Pens. The paper is more like a thin watercolor paper than writing paper.
Moving on . . .
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Montblanc Gandhi Writing Sample |
Montblanc Gandhi fountain pen ink is no longer available. It can be found on eBay (I’ve been thinking about selling my spare bottle, but I’m not sure I want to let it go, you know?)
The ink is such a pretty pretty orange, lots of good shading, and is definitely one to try if you can find it.
Spatters, anyone?
Diamine Amber is next on our hit list . . .
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Diamine Amber Writing Sample |
Diamine Amber is just so light and feels a bit dry. This ink is in a Lamy with extra-fine nib and that may be part of the issue, but I’ve had other orange inks in the same pen and they’ve not been this light. I like inks that work in all of my pens (makes life easier, you know?) and with so many orange options available, I’m not so keen on this one. Others seem to like it.
And look at the spatters – good saturation there, friends.
Montblanc Gandhi isn’t the only game in town . . .
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De Atramentis Gandhi Writing Sample |
This was my first time using this ink and for some strange reason, I didn’t have high expectations. Silly me – it’s a perfectly fine ink. Some shading, writes quite well. No reason to be concerned. It’s really not like Montblanc Gandhi – not that it matters, I think it would be a little silly to compare the two just because they share a name. I like it.
I also think I did a pretty good job on the spatters here . . .
Next up . . .
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Noodler’s Apache Sunset Writing Sample |
People are generally coco-crazy for Noodler’s Apache Sunset. Even using an extra-fine nib, I can see the potential here. Absolutely insane shading. The color is very orange. People who don’t like this ink seem to say that there is no practical application for it – I’m not sure I understand. Maybe they feel that way about all orange inks?
So . . . check out the spatter. See the streak? Please know that I waited a full 24 hours after creating the spatters before scanning. THE INK WAS STILL WET! Insanity. (Even more insane – you can see this streak on other images, too…arrrgh. I need to figure out how to clean my scanner.)
Anyway . . .
Dude. Check out Pilot Iroshizuku Yu-yake . . .
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Pilot Iroshizuku Yu-yake Writing Sample |
Shading, saturation, great orange color – maybe a little red in there. Yu-yake is bright and cheerful. Writes like a dream. A new favorite of mine.
I’ve had good experiences with all Pilot Iroshizuku inks. They are a bit more expensive than other brands, but they are incomparable in terms of overall brand quality.
Last, and certainly not least: Noodler’s Habanero.
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Noodler’s Hanbaero Writing Sample |
It’s been awhile since I’ve had Noodler’s Habanero in a pen. I’m not sure why. I fall in love with it every time. The beautiful shading, the gorgeous orange that reminds me of autumn. Yum.
The only issue is that it seems to stay wet forever. Though, apparently, not as long as Noodler’s Apache Sunset.
That’s it!
Which are your favorites?
xoxo