Eye Candy: Morning Glory 1.8mm Flat Mechanical Pencil

I purchased a flat lead mechanical pencil several years ago at a big box office supply store that I used to practice my lettering. Unfortunately, it was not stocked for long so supply of the lead was very limited. I bought several of the pencils and a bunch of the lead refills for friends but we all coveted them.

A couple weeks ago, I got a wild hair to search on Amazon to see if anyone else was making a pencil like the one I had because everyone’s supply of leads had finally dwindled. I really wanted to buy my friend one for Christmas. I got lucky and found that Morning Glory makes a 1.8mm flat lead mechanical pencil which is available on Amazon with several containers of lead refills. There is also just an option just to stockpile a bunch of the lead refills.

The images below were done in 2008 using the original Foray 0.9mm flat lead mechanical pencil in the class I was taking.

Foray 0.9 flat lead pencil in action

These flat lead pencils are great if you are wanting to simulate an italic edge. Once you get the point filed down at a particular angle, this is a pencil you won’t want to rotate. You’ll want to keep that chisel edge. As a left-handed writer, I found this particularly useful because I could chisel the angle to meet my particular writing angle and still attempt to achieve the correct weights on down strokes.

more flat lead practice

The Zebra MLP2 is very similar to the original Foray flat lead mechanical pencil that I used for the drawings here.It looks like more of these flat lead mechanical pencils are entering the market as an easy way to fill in standardized tests. Keep an eye out in your local office supply aisles. The leads seems to only be 2B so that the scanning machines can read them but that works for calligraphy practice just fine too.

thick pencil lettering

Mechanical pencils are a minimum investment and there is no upkeep required. If you are wanting to try calligraphy in the new year, this is a great way to try it with very little fuss. All of my instructors over the years recommended practicing with pencil and these flat mechanical pencils give the sense of line weight better than a standard hex pencil.

The folks over on the BYOB Pen Club podcast were talking about methods to practice and improve Spencerian and other calligraphy skills last week with Nik Pang and it got me thinking about the things I’ve learned over the years. I’ve learned different sorts of calligraphy skills (Nik would probably call them “wrong”) but I thought I would pass along the information in case it was useful.

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3 comments / Add your comment below

  1. Great review! I use the Morning Glory pencil all the time to practice my calligraphy especially where it’s not practical to take my dip pens and ink. I really like them!

  2. Ooh, I might have to pick one of these up.

    I’ve had good luck sharpening both standard wood pencils and lead in lead holders to a flat point with this stand from Derwent and an Xacto knife. The sandpaper pencil pointers can also help keep the point at the angle that you want but I have found them to be messier, creating very fine black dust that smudges over everything. https://www.amazon.com/Derwent-Pencil-Sharpening-Stand-2300451/dp/B008PCH58A

  3. You can find these listed as 2b exam pencils doing an international search on ebay and amazon for roughly gbp1.50 either as pencils or leads.

    Great for writing practice.

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