mangosteen: (Default)
[personal profile] mangosteen
The best way I've found to write anything at all is to stop trying to write everything at once, so here I am.

The writing I want to write about is the writing I've been writing lately, albeit not in this particular venue. Rather, the inscriptions have been inscribed in a book; one made of paper, thread and probably some glue. In specific, a notebook with lovely paper that is just smooth enough to allow the ink to flow, and rough enough to know that the ink is indelibly marking a surface that's meant to be marked.

This journal in which I journal sits upon a desk made of the finest IKEAlite that money can buy. The lighting is directed indirectly, multiply-sourced, diode-emitted, and as pleasing as one could imagine for the task of putting pen to paper in the pursuit of conveying words to a medium where they can't move around as much.

Setting the scene above, I can tell you the tale of what brought me to care about any of the things in that brobdingnagian boulliabaise of a tableau.

Enter the fountain pen. The pen, for purposes of this discussion is a Pilot Metropolitan in Classic Black, with a fine point nib. You'll find yourself with change out of a twenty US Dollar banknote, were you to purchase a new one.

A bit of background: Charitably speaking, I have a broad assortment of inexpensive ball-point pens. If one were less charitable, one could reasonably note that after throwing out roughly seventy no-longer-working and/or empty and/or exploded pens, the only accurate phrase would be "a good start."

More background: My handwriting is neat, stylized, and compact. Anything broader than a fine-point pen is certain to cause frustration. To complicate things, physics conspires against me in a most obvious way, inasmuch that a science can conspire. The finer the point on the paper, the more friction there will be against the surface, as a ball-point pen requires a small amount of bearing down in order to move the bearing. The more downward pressure, the more fatigue, the less written. By contrast, a fountain pen releases ink by way of pressure on the nib, of which the weight of the pen itself typically suffices.

Ergo, when one has handwriting that does not suffer insufficient writing utensils, it's somewhat surprising that I never ventured into the realm of fountain pens previously. One possible explanation is that your humble narrator was put off by the pen snobbery that went hand-in-hand with the pen geekery, much in the way that it's possible to look askance at someone who insists on calling their wristwatch a "timepiece". Self-knowledge dictates that my purchase of a fountain pen costing multiple hectadollars would only lead to regret, coniciding with the first time I uttered a question involving the words "my other pants." This may shed a small amount of light on how I assembled a veritable dragon's hoard of plastic, ink, and tiny tungsten ball bearings.

With all that written, I now write more. I have filled notebooks at home, and I have found a small and significant delight in bringing a notebook into meetings at my workplace. I often talk about "increasing the resolution of my world"; being disciplined enough to learn a discipline enough to see some part of the world on a finer scale, where the invisible parts are not so visible to be obtrusive, but laid plain enough to be seen at all. I can safely say that in the past approximately seven months I have acquired a much greater appreciation for paper, ink, and the quiet capillary action of a fountain pen.

Date: 2018-03-05 11:59 pm (UTC)
darxus: (Default)
From: [personal profile] darxus
I'm also somewhat fond of fountain pens. I have that Pilot.

I have not figured out a way to keep one in a pocket that I'm happy with.

Date: 2018-03-06 05:06 pm (UTC)
darxus: (Default)
From: [personal profile] darxus
I basically did the same, with the same pen. Eventually got ink everywhere enough times that I stopped.

I've been tempted to try a Kaweco Liliput.

Date: 2018-03-07 09:36 pm (UTC)
etherial: Firefly Season 2 Logo (hopeless causes)
From: [personal profile] etherial
This is the primary reason I've never tried fountain pens. I had enough pens leak on me as a kid to know that I would never tolerate a pen renowned for its propensity to leak.

Date: 2018-03-06 12:41 am (UTC)
goddessfarmer: (Default)
From: [personal profile] goddessfarmer
you, sir, have set the stage for a veritable fount of information. One almost expects a book to follow.
Also, I don't interact with you nearly enough.
Edited Date: 2018-03-06 12:42 am (UTC)

Date: 2018-03-06 06:39 am (UTC)
lillilah: (Default)
From: [personal profile] lillilah
I was thinking about people who write in notebooks just the other day. I used to love yellow legal pads and clipboards. Now, I love wikis. I still have notebooks for occasional information I need to keep around, but mainly my writing is electronic these days. I finally took the notebook out of my purse, because I was never using it, which is fine. I just passed 80,000 words on the fanfic that I'm writing. That's more than I've ever done in one piece before, so I'm going to call this progress.

Date: 2018-03-06 04:37 pm (UTC)
lillilah: (Default)
From: [personal profile] lillilah
At the moment, I am writing Mass Effect fanfic (http://archiveofourown.org/works/1249606). I am in the process of starting a D&D fanfic and eventually writing some historical explorers fic (as in, Stanley goes to Africa to find Dr. Livingstone, crossed with Lovecraft and Indiana Jones). Perhaps the latter could be called "Dime Novel-style". Anyway, yay for writing!

Date: 2018-03-06 06:27 pm (UTC)
hrafn: (Default)
From: [personal profile] hrafn
I got a fountain pen (one of the lower-priced Lamy pens) a couple years ago (mostly for personal journaling, but then I bought a 2nd so I had one at work for notes) and gosh it's been wonderful.

Date: 2018-03-07 08:42 am (UTC)
whitebird: (Default)
From: [personal profile] whitebird
I've used a Sheaffer Agio fountain pen since 1993 or so. It's very slender for a fountain pen, which is a bit rare, they tend towards thicker designs.

Fly with them in a Ziplock. Next time in New York City, visit Fountain Pen Hospital (I have yet to do so.) Levenger makes some very nice paper.

Date: 2018-03-07 05:48 pm (UTC)
gale_storm: (Default)
From: [personal profile] gale_storm
I’m marking this entry of yours to remind myself to find my fountain pens that have gone astray.

I enjoyed the reading of the writing.

Date: 2018-03-10 11:51 pm (UTC)
tshuma: (read!)
From: [personal profile] tshuma
So the reading of the writing here should be read as pleasurable.

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Elias K. Mangosteen

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