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mateuszurbanowicz
mateuszurbanowicz

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About fountain pens

I have been using fountain pens for drawing since I can remember. We have been using them in Poland for writing in primary school (your letters were supposed to look better when written this way) so, naturally, I used them for drawing too. 

Sometimes I switch to other pens, multiliners or rapidograph pens for the lines of my illustrations but I often find myself going back to fountain pens and recently I did it again. 

This is what I currently use to do lines in all my bigger projects:

LAMY Safari with the M nib and a LAMY AL-star with the finest EF nib for writing and sketching.


I generally avoid ballpoint pens (even the better ones) mostly because I don't feel they are reliable enough. I feel that the line they produce lack in the stability and repeatability the pens I mentioned above provide. I know that some artists use them for sketching and even final illustrations (like for example Fran Meneses) but they are not for me.


On the other hand, I would really like to use the nib pens that comic artists in Japan prefer but because of the sharp nib tip, they are not well suited for watercolor paper. So a no-go for me. 


Fountain pens, however, do have a lot of advantages: 

* you can carry them with you wherever you go (except Space - they don't like very low pressure nor vacuum)

* because of the rounded nib tip the writing experience is very smooth and they can be used even on fairly textured watercolors paper

* they come in various types, shapes and nib shapes and widths

* they produce beautiful, uniform, repeatable lines with some pressure variability if needed (you can get softer nibs that allow for more variable lines)

* fountain pens don't require so much pressure to make the line so they are good for minimizing hand and wrist strain 

* most good fountain pens are quite sturdy and last a long time. With more popular brands you can replace nibs if you damage them or want to get different with of lines. 

* even cheaper fountain pens can be used for drawing - I used a lot Pilot KAKUNO pens which go for about 10$

* some can be completely disassembled and cleaned

* and finally, with popular brands, you can get a converter, which replaces the cartridge and allows you to use a lot of different inks of many brands; color inks, pigment inks, and waterproof inks included. (some inks that are not meant to be used with pens can clog it! Be careful!)


Being able to use color waterproof inks is a big deal for me - I'm drawing most lines for my current illustrations with waterproof blue ink and painting over them with watercolors! With multiliners, I'm mostly stuck with black and rapidograph pens don't give me such line variability. I'm currently using the SAILOR seiboku and souboku blue inks which are waterproof and pigment based for my line work.


Also, the ink flow with fountain pens is generally better than with multiliners - the ink does not have to go through the felt-like tip so even with faster, energetic lines you can get good nice, stable lines. 


If you have not tried yet writing or drawing with a fountain pen, I deeply recommend you trying them out. If you don't know what to buy, try some at your local store or buy the ones I use - LAMY Safari (or cheaper Pilot KAKUNO). Also, remember that the paper that you use for writing and drawing is really important when you use a fountain pen - not all papers can handle the wet ink. For writing, the MD notebooks made by MIDORI company are a good example of well-suited paper.

Also - there are some fountain-like pens made for drawing (manga pens with fountain pen nibs). I tried out some of them and (in my opinion) just a good fountain pen is a better solution.

Comments

It was awesome! Unfortunately, I had very bad taste in second grade and chose the ugliest purple for my fountain pen. (Still, I am disappointed to have lost this fountain pen at some point in 5th grade...)

But I used the Pelikan brand as a kid a lot too!

A custom fountain pen in second grade sounds like an awesome thing!! I wish we had it too :)

I'm from Switzerland and we also wrote with fountain pens in school. (The highlight of second grade...writing cursive in pencil well enough to be worthy of the Pelikan fountain pen the school provides you with in the colour of your choice, with your name engraved on it...) I currently use the fountain pens you do, but it has never occurred to me (until you recently mentioned it in a video) to use them for inking or drawing, even though I've been looking for a good tool for this, and am not a big fan of ballpoint pens and am absolutely horrid at dip pens... Thank you for the ink suggestion. I hadn't thought to put waterproof ink in my converters. I will definitely try this. (Also agree on the MD Midori notebooks, they are very nice for writing.)

Yes, I would like to master the G-pen someday but it's too difficult still :) I can not control the line well enough - but it's what a lot of comic artists use here so it has a certain charm and status to it in Japan :)

Thanks so much for sharing this! I have always avoided fountain pens and only used the Japanese dip pens because i thought you could not put waterproof ink in them. I will have to try it! Also you should try the "g-pen" nib for the dip pen. It is so flexible and flows well that i don't feel like it digs into my watercolor paper too much.


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