This post just got inspired by (trying) to sign another receipt where the restaurant had a clogged ballpoint that would write only intermittently.

I don’t carry a pen with me. Most extended text I work with these days is typed, so don’t use one enough to really do so, but I have thought about doing so.

There are a couple of pen communities on Lemmy (which I’ll mention below, for folks who might be interested). Thought I’d get a broader cross-section view of the general public, though; pen enthusiasts tend to have their own, often kinda niche, positions.

A few years back, I decided that I’d hit up an online pen store, get a variety of pens, and see what I liked.

In general, I’ve found that:

  • Ballpoints are the most-common pen I see in the US. They use oil-based ink. They require a high amount of pressure to write with. They are inexpensive, don’t smear, and don’t bleed. And they are the only option if you need to use carbon paper, like on a check, due to that high pressure. But they are also exasperatingly prone to clogging, particularly on some receipts – not sure if it’s due to some sort of coating on the receipt paper. If you particularly like a given case, you can get non-disposable pens with semi-standardized inserts to “refill” a pen; these contain a replacement tip and ink container.

  • Rollerball pens or gel pens use water-based ink. I’m generally pretty enthusiastic about them; they’re probably my favorite as things stand, though I grew up mostly with ballpoints. They do have some drawbacks: they are more-prone than ballpoints to smearing (for those left-handed people out there who don’t write right-handed and drag their hand through fresh ink when writing, I suspect that that’s especially annoying). They’re more-prone than to bleeding through paper (though this depends on on the paper and ink). However, my experience has been that they do much better than ballpoints when it comes to writing consistently without clogging. They also write much more-smoothly than ballpoints; the tip’s interaction with the paper is closer to “gliding” over it, is less-fatiguing than writing with a ballpoint; many people find this to be a rather-pleasant surprise if they’re used to ballpoints. Larger-diameter tips are even smoother. I have no idea why I see fewer problems with clogging with these, as intuitively I’d think that “water would dry out, and oil wouldn’t”. But, well, I just rarely see clogging with 'em, whereas with ballpoints, it’s a near-universal. As with ballpoints, you can get semi-standardized inserts to “refill” a pen if you want a non-disposable. I would encourage most people to, if they have only used ballpoints in their life, to give a rollerball a try at some point; I was significantly happier.

  • Felt-tip pens have a solid core through which ink moves. I used to think of these mostly as permanent Sharpies for writing on odd surfaces (thick, not something you’d write with), highlighters (again, special-purpose, not something you’d write with) or washable, large-diameter pens for kids doing coloring or something, again not what you’d write with. But I have had some narrow-diameter felt-tip pens, and they tend to work pretty well. They don’t clog. They can dry out, if you leave them uncapped, but you can normally get even those going by adding a drop of water to the tip and letting the pen sit for a while. These do have some downsides – if you let the tip sit on one place on paper, they tend to bleed through, since it keeps dispensing ink. That’s not a problem with ballpoints or rollerballs. My experience is that they have more friction than rollerballs, don’t have quite the “gliding” feel. You have a lot of options as to size of the tip, can get very large ones. For writing, you probably want a narrow one; these have a metal sleeve and just expose a bit of the felt at the end. Apparently it’s possible, for some of these, to get refills, though I don’t believe that it’s common; these come in the form of liquid ink. Normally, I believe that these are disposables.

  • Fountain pens. I really thought that these were entirely-obsolete, though they certainly have some ardent fans. I’ve read a lot from enthusiasts about how one should clean nibs, only store them in particular orientations, etc. However, on a whim, I picked up a package of cheap disposables. I then stored them in a hot car for years, didn’t clean them at all, ignored storage orientation, did pretty much everything that I was told shouldn’t be done with fountain pens. They wrote without a hitch. So I decided to give 'em more of a chance. These have something of a “gliding” feel, kind of like rollerballs. The tips are a bit more-fragile than rollerballs or ballpoints, can damage them by stabbing things. The big drawback: these guys are prone to bleeding through paper; having a sheet of blotting paper or maybe a clipboard beneath when writing to soak up any extra ink is a good idea, unless you’ve got more control than I do. I did pick up some thicker, more-expensive paper, and that helps a considerable bit, but obviously, if you intend to use only one type of special paper for writing, that’s a pretty substantial constraint on pen use. They also tend to be more prone to smearing. Like felt-tips, as long as you keep the nib down, they’ll keep dispensing ink, so you gotta train yourself to lift the nib if you’re stopping movement. The big selling point with these, as best I can tell, is that you have an extremely wide variety of inks, and using non-disposable fountain pens that permit for refills is very common. Some people mix their own. The inks have various properties – here’s a page talking about sheen, shimmer, and shading – that can let them create really visually-impressive effects. They can dispense all sorts of exotic inks that wouldn’t work well in ballpoint, rollerball, or felt tip pens. I’ve never taken advantage of this, don’t write enough for it, but I do think that it’s neat; I have occasionally thought about picking up a fountain pen plotter, but don’t think that I’d likely plot enough for it to be worthwhile. Looking at the state of plotters and printer manufacturers, which frequently use a razor and blades model for ink, I think that it’d be nice to just be able to get whatever consumables from whomever.

There are a few other kinds of exotic pens, like fudepens (or “brush pens”) that are really more-interesting when doing stuff like East Asian lettering or some kinds of art, but aren’t really what you’d want for writing in normal-sized Latin script. Or paint markers; also not really something you’d expect to normally write with.

In general, I found that I preferred larger tips. As long as I don’t have to write in a too-confined space, ink flow with ballpoints and rollerballs was more-consistent and with them or felt tips, the writing was smoother.

As a kid, I used to use wood or mechanical pencils, but unless one needs erasability, I don’t really feel that they stand up to pens. With wood pencils, one needs to lug around a sharpener. With either, the graphite tends to smear over time; fold up a paper with pencil writing and put it in a pocket, and it’ll slowly blur to unrecognizability. And the graphite gets on things (and I’d just as soon not be having electrically-conductive dust being dumped everywhere).

For me, the big issue with going crazy on pens in 2024 is that I just don’t use one all that much. Even a lone disposable pen will last me a very long time. But it is nice to still be able to write consistently when one does want to write, and I felt that I’d never really sat down and looked into the various options out there.

Since I think that it’s worthwhile to mention relevant communities to help people find them, if they haven’t yet:

!fountainpens@lemmy.world

!fountain_pens@lemmy.world. Doesn’t seem to be getting much traction.

!fountainpens@infosec.pub. No traffic.

!pens@lemmy.world. Only a little traffic.

!pens@feddit.uk. No traffic.

There are also some .ml-based communities; I tend to use non-ml-based communities in preference to .ml-based communities myself, but for those who feel otherwise, there are !fountainpens@lemmy.ml, !pens@lemmy.ml, !pen@lemmy.ml, and !pensandpaper@lemmy.ml, none of which are seeing much activity.

  • nezrock@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 months ago

    I have to write a fair bit by hand at work and I switched from the Pilot G2 to Sharpie S-Gels. They’re better in every way.

    • d00phy@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Lawyer had us sign some papers last week and was saying she just found these. They were pretty decent.

    • baldingpudenda@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      G2 is my go to. Pens are constantly “accidentally” stolen at work so I have my G2 and the ballpoints on me. Anyone asks to borrow I hand them the ballpoint. If it’s not handed back, I’m not gonna be mad.

    • tal@lemmy.todayOP
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      2 months ago

      I think that that’s the most-commonly-available rollerball I see in brick-and-mortar stores here (in the US). I’ve probably used it more than any other rollerball, just because it’s there, though I don’t personally have a preference among the rollerballs I’ve used. They all seem to work pretty well to me.

        • TheOneAndOnly@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          This is the way. The Pilot G2.07, in my opinion, is the best pen on the market, and the ONLY pen I’ve used for over a decade now. I get mad when I have to use any other garbage pen.

  • Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Do you remember the 90s movie Home Alone 2? In it, Kevin McCallister had a cassette recorder, which doubled as a merchandise selling oppertunity. It basically just had the ability to do things that were “cool” and “edgy” if you were 8 years old…

    I bring this up to say that NOT in the movie was a different kind of Talk Boy. The Talk Boy Pen. They used the aesthetics of the Talkboy to make a pen that digitally records your voice for 10 seconds. You can also play one of 6 pre-recorded sound effects.

    The pen ran out of ink, and I don’t know how to “refill” it. If I could ever get that going, it would be cool to use it…even though I’m 40 years old, and would look like a dork.

    • tal@lemmy.todayOP
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      2 months ago

      kagis

      According to this ~30-year-old manual:

      http://www.transformertoys.co.uk/images/instruction-scans/hasbro/Talkboy_Recording_Pen.pdf

      It apparently shipped with a refill cartridge, which means that it is replaceable.

      I don’t know if there’s a good way to find whether it’s a standard size, but if you take it to an office supply store and kind of eyeball the refill inserts on the shelves, you can probably guess whether they’d fit, get one and try it out.

      Could also measure it, I guess, if you have calipers, and try looking for what the sizes of refill cartridges are.

      EDIT2: Tiger Electronics is also still around. You’re asking about a product that probably predates most of the people at the company, but I bet that if people have questions, they probably go there, so might just try contacting the company, see if they have an answer.

      • Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Me too! Although, I asked for the Talkboy. The pen was probably because my dad was probably in the store like “THAT LITTLE FUCKER JUST SAID TALKBOY! WELL THIS TALKBOY PLAYS CASSETTES, AND THIS TALKBOY IS A PEN!!! WHICH IS IT??? FUCK IT! I’LL JUST GET BOTH!!!”

        Pssshhhhh!!! Parents…

        Not even knowing what the talkboy is…

        “Hi kids, we’re home early…”

        slowed down

        “Hiiiiii kiiiiidssssss weee’rrreeee hoooommmeeee eeeeaaaarrrllllyyyy”

  • Coelacanth@feddit.nu
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    2 months ago

    A good fountain pen is hard to beat, at least as long as you have appropriate slightly thicker paper to go with it. It’s not the most convenient at all times, but for stuff like journalling or creative writing it enhances the experience in a way you just don’t get with others pens in my experience. Both the sense of gliding across the page and the sound of it against the paper are so pleasant.

  • MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz
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    2 months ago

    During all my years in education, I always used a mechanical pencil for almost everything, if I could. Obviously pencil isn’t suitable for everything, especially as it can’t be permanent, the way inks can.

    But whenever I could, I’d write with graphite. Because it felt the best IMO and simply always, always, always worked. I took care of my pen and always kept it ready for use.

    I had a nice one that used .5mm graphite. I don’t remember what hardness I used, but I preferred the thinner rods due to the result barely smearing at all, and also being more easily erasable. With thicker lead, I found you couldn’t get a middle ground where legibility, smearinyness and erasability were all excellent.

    My pen had an eraser on the other end, the kind you could extend like a tube of lip balm as it got used up. Once it was gone, you could buy replacements that’d slot in.

    For a while I tried thermal-erasable ink pens, but I didn’t stick with them, and went back to pencil.

    • tal@lemmy.todayOP
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      2 months ago

      I think that with mechanicals, 0.7 mm was by far the most-common I’ve seen. 0.5 showed up as well, but it required a light touch to avoid snapping the lead.

      I also remember seeing 1.0 mm pencils.

      Some months back, I went looking at pencils and discovered that there are also much-larger sizes that one can get; there are normally used for art, since you normally want them for shading. With a pencil, the shape of the tip is constantly changing, and that becomes more-significant the larger the diameter.

      The really large ones were called “lead holders” rather than pencils, though one wouldn’t use those for normal writing.

      EDIT: This kind of thing: this one is 5.6 mm:

      https://www.jetpens.com/Kaweco-Sketch-Up-Clutch-Pencil-5.6-mm-Brass/pd/13396

      The larger sizes don’t appear to be standardized the way the smaller ones, up to ~2.0 mm, are.

      • MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz
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        2 months ago

        Of yeah, but in my case my use was exclusively writing. And yes, 0.7 is more common. The lead is just that little bit more durable, and cheaper pens are able to work well enough.

        But I really didn’t like using anything thicker than .5. A wood pencil or even just .7mm both led to lines thick enough that a large amount of graphite dust would inevitably fall off the page and make a mess.

        The whole reason I liked mechanical pencils so much was that with them I could use a harder and thinner lead that didn’t produce as much dust, or really even smear that much, and still get legible contrasty lines.

        With the pen I had the lead never broke. If it does, it means the metal tube that the lead is extruded out of isn’t a good enough match to the diameter of the rod to support it and prevent it from bending under the pressure of the page. This can happen with cheap lead, or cheap pens, and the consequent wiggleroom inside the pen.

  • jet@hackertalks.com
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    2 months ago

    Screw Top pen, so that the ink won’t leak. Great for luggage, or a bag, so you don’t have to worry about heat, or having it thrown around, or pressurization changes. And usually you can put any ink cartridges inside that you like.

    • tal@lemmy.todayOP
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      2 months ago

      It’s more hassle, I expect, but it also looks like one can get pen cases that should keep a pen’s cap from being pulled off, which might also address the problem if one particularly likes a pen that has a cap that doesn’t screw on:

      https://www.amazon.com/s?k=hard+pen+case

      I haven’t had issues with ballpoints or rollerballs leaking in bags. And I haven’t carried a fountain pen in a backpack or bag. But now that you mention it, I do kind of wonder what would happen if one carried a fountain pen in a backpack, the cap came partway off, and then the nib was depressed by the cap, since I imagine that ink would just keep running out of the thing.

      EDIT: Probably also risk damaging the nib in that situation.

  • TurtlePower@lemm.ee
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    2 months ago

    I absolutely love a good fountain pen. My everyday carry is a LAMY Safari. I prefer a matte dark black ink such as Platinum Chou Kuro, but it’s quite expensive. I stick with Monteverde cartridges for my Safari for ease of use since I take it everywhere. They’re black enough to suit me and it dries rather quickly for less smear. Someday when I get something really fancy that stays at home, I’ll probably use Platinum Carbon Black, as it’s half the price of Chou Kuro, though I may just pony up for it.

    • HamsterRage@lemmy.ca
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      2 months ago

      Platinum also makes fountain pens. The Plaisir is notable because the cap seals incredibility well. The result is that it can go a loooonnnnggg time unused and the ink won’t dry out and clog it up. A great pen for those that only occasionally need to use a pen. Fairly cheap, too. Around $20, I think.

  • Mechanismatic@lemmy.ml
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    2 months ago

    I’ve been using black ink Pilot Rolling Ball Precise v5 extra fine pens for about 25 years, back to when the body was gray instead of black. They write well, can have a nice crisp scratching sound when used on the right paper, the body is a good weight, easy to spin in your fingers when you’re bored in a meeting, the cold feel of the metal clip is nice for some reason.

  • Mr_Blott@feddit.uk
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    2 months ago

    Do pencils count?

    I absolutely love my Pica. So useful for building work; the built in sharpener is genius. They do felt tip pen versions too but I found they run out too quickly

  • tal@lemmy.todayOP
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    2 months ago

    Note that I said that you can get a dried-up felt-tip going again with a drop of water and some time to sit. That’s true for ones using water-soluble inks, but not all felt-tips use water-soluble inks and I don’t want to spread incorrect information; you may need to use 90% isopropyl alcohol for inks where alcohol is the solvent.