Recap: LA Pen Show

Recap by Laura Cameron

This past weekend, I went to my very first pen show, the Los Angeles International Pen Show.  I was born and raised in Los Angeles and my dad, who is a fountain pen enthusiast, still lives there.  Ana and I decided to make the trip and I got to spend time with her and my parents. Overall, it was a fabulous trip.

Thursday

We headed out to Los Angeles on Thursday night.  All day we heard stories about how the hotel was under construction and really wasn’t ready to host the show.  By the time we arrived at 10 pm, all hotel elevators were in service and the ballroom was ready for the vendors.  We stayed up way too late in the bar meeting friends and sharing pens.

Friday

Friday morning dawned bright and early.  Ana went down to the ballroom super early to help Vanness Pen Shop set up its booth and to work the booth until reinforcements arrived.  I enjoyed our room’s balcony and knit for an hour or so in the warm sunshine (a novelty for Kansans in February).  Then I went downstairs and wandered the show.

My first stop was the Franklin Christoph booth. I’d been advised to hit it early if I wanted to pick out a beautiful prototype; at shows Franklin Christoph brings leftover production one-offs for sale.  I ended up picking up a beautiful Pocket 45 that was left over from the Philly Pen Show. It’s black and purple and moody and swirly and I dig it.  I got to wait while Jim Rouse tuned the nib for me!

LA Pen Show

After buying my Franklin Christoph, I wandered over to the Vanness Pens booth and picked up a special show notebook. Joey Feldman is a fountain pen enthusiast. He designed the notebook cover, and was even on hand to sign it for me.

LA Pen Show

LA Pen Show

I spent the rest of the morning wandering around and finding all sorts of things to look at. I ended up not buying anything else that day.

Instead, I spent most of the day keeping my new friend Jessica, owner of Vintage Pen Shop, company at her booth. Jessica sells vintage Esterbook pens. She’s got a great set up where she restores the pen bodies and ink sacs, and then sets up a nib testing station where you can try all the potential nibs and match the nib of your choice to the pen body you select. Just listening to Jessica talk I learned a lot about Esterbrooks and had a fantastic time hanging out with her.

LA Pen Show

LA Pen Show

LA Pen Show

Friday night I had dinner with my parents, and returned to the hotel bar (ok it was a tent, but there was alcohol) to hang out with all the pen people and test pens.

Saturday

Saturday was the day that a lot of money left my wallet! I had intended to spend Saturday walking around the show and making purchases, as Sunday was going to be the only day open to the public and was forecasted to be a zoo. So I spent the day wandering with Ana, asking questions and learning a lot about pens. We were also able to take a few classes. The first was a class about nibs with John Mottishaw. The second was a class on handwriting flourishes taught by Michael Sull, who happens to live about 20 minutes from me. Just before the class with Michael Sull, Ana took me through a pen show newbie rite, getting my name done in Spencerian Script by Mr. Sull.

LA Pen Show

With a bit more show wandering in the afternoon, I saw a beautiful Pilot pen from the 1980s that I couldn’t get out of my head. It is probably my favorite purchase from the show, for how delicate the art is and how well the fine nib writes.

LA Pen Show

In the afternoon I spent more time hanging out with Jessica and ended up taking home an Esterbrook of my very own. I selected a red LJ body, and a 9556 fine writing nib.

LA Pen Show

Sometime during the day, I also managed to pick up a Unicorn Snot (Spa Blue/Lime Green) NockCo Sinclair pen case.

LA Pen Show

Saturday night was a great dinner with pen folks and more time in the bar. Saturday night I got to try some amazing pens, mostly Nakayas. Many were way out of my price range, but it was so wonderful to get a chance to write with them. We also ended up bringing all of our purchased inks downstairs so we could sample them together.

LA Pen Show
Photo Credit: Jessica Coles

Sunday

Sunday was a slow day for me. Ana was busy working the Vanness Pens booth and I slept in and took it easy. In the afternoon my parents came up to the show. My dad really enjoyed wandering the show and even found a pen to take home, and I enjoyed sharing some of what I had learned with my mom who isn’t a pen enthusiast, but is definitely a good sport. We spent the rest of the afternoon and evening hanging out.

Sunday night everyone was exhausted and many were heading for home, so there wasn’t a bar night. Ana and I turned in early.

Monday

Ana and I mostly bummed around Los Angeles in the morning and then headed to the airport in the afternoon. Our flight was delayed so there was much airport knitting and cookie eating. Late that evening, many miles behind us, the light side and the dark side arrived home to the freezing temperatures, missing LA and pen show buddies already.

LA Pen Show

I had a great time and I can’t wait for the next show! (My wallet, on the other hand, is probably due for a reprieve.)

LA Pen Show


Laura is a tech editor, podcaster, knitter, spinner and recent pen addict. You can learn more about her knitting and tea adventures on her website, The Corner of Knit & Tea and can find her on Instagram as Fluffykira.

Link Love: Edition with the Best Titles

Link Love: Edition with the Best Titles

I’m pretty sure everyone had their Wheaties this week because the post titles were first rate. Even if you don’t click through to every single one, you might want to with titles like “Notebook Turducken” and “The Jinhao 991 Is a Wolf in Uni-ball’s Clothing”. That’s just two of the gems this week. There’s more and I think everyone deserves a high five for verbal acumen!

Post of the Week:

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Ink Review: Monteverde Mandarin Orange

In the last few months, after a lifetime of eschewing the color orange, I’ve been adding more of it to my stash of yarns and inks.  Given this, I insisted that The Desk try Monteverde’s Mandarin Orange as part of it’s inkapalooza.

Monteverde Inks

Mandarin Orange is a good, solid orange ink.  The orange is dark and vibrant, but doesn’t fall into pumpkin or highlighter orange shades.  It is a true, rich, deep orange.

Monteverde Mandarin Orange

Monteverde Mandarin Orange

As you can see, with different nibs and applications I can coax a variety of shades out of this one. In its deepest application, there is definite shading but I don’t get sheen of any other color but that glorious orange.

Monteverde Mandarin Orange

Unfortunately, like many of the other Monteverde inks I sampled, this one isn’t water resistant at all so you won’t be able to keep your written word on the page if it gets wet. That said, I’m tempted to paint with it because the water creates such a lovely orange wash.

Monteverde Mandarin Orange

Apparently I’m a lover of opposites on the color wheel, so I filled my Platinum 3776 Chartres Blue (soft fine nib) with some Mandarin Orange and away we went.

Monteverde Mandarin Orange

I’m also squealing with glee because I have now sampled enough inks to be able to provide some color comparisons. I’d say that Mandarin Orange falls in the same intensity level as Diamine Ancient Copper and Kobe #8 Arima Amber, but leans more towards true orange, whereas those two lean more brown. It is also much deeper and more nuanced than Mont Blanc Lucky Orange or Sailor Jentle Apricot.

Mandarin Orange gets two thumbs up from this orange convert.

Tools:

Laura is a tech editor, podcaster, knitter, spinner and recent pen addict. You can learn more about her knitting and tea adventures on her website, The Corner of Knit & Tea and can find her on Instagram as Fluffykira.


DISCLAIMER: The items included in this review were provided free of charge by Pen Chalet for the purpose of review. Please see the About page for more details.

Review: Moleskine Eraser & Sharpener Set

Review: Moleskine Eraser & Sharpener Set

Review by Tina Koyama

Well-known for its iconic notebook, Moleskine has been coming out with quite a few other analog stationery and art products the past several years. I recently reviewed the graphite drawing pencils and watercolor pencils. When I was choosing contenders for my Great Eraser Rub-Off Challenge, I included the eraser from the Moleskine Eraser & Sharpener Set ($5.95), but I was also interested in the sharpener because JetPens’ video showed it being used with a jumbo pencil.

The eraser was not particularly stellar against its formidable opponents; you can read about its performance in the Great Rub-Off. I didn’t say much about the eraser’s appearance in the challenge, so it’s worth mentioning here that it maintains the clean, matte black esthetic that is part of Moleskine’s trademark. The logo is printed in white. I found the slender bar shape easy to hold and use.

Now, on to the focus of this review: the sharpener. At first glance, the sharpener looks similar to many handheld sharpeners that are no larger than the blade. It has a matte black finish with a shiny black Moleskine logo. I gotta hand it to Moleskine: Everything the company makes looks good together.

The surprise comes when you look at its business end, which has a very large 12.5mm diameter hole. The package says the sharpener is “designed exclusively for Moleskine pencils.”

When I read “Moleskine pencils,” I thought immediately of the square-barreled drawing and colored pencils I had reviewed recently. Those pencils have a conventional size barrel, but I thought maybe the sharpener would accommodate its distinctive shape. It doesn’t; I mangled the collar and point badly (I’ll spare you photos of that butchery).

That’s when I realized that Moleskine is referring to its large, rectangular-barreled pencils. (They were obviously designed to look like the iconic notebook, but I’ve always thought they look like carpenter’s pencils dressed up for a funeral.)

Sadly, I don’t have those pencils to sharpen with the sharpener that was made “exclusively” for them. But I do have a wide variety of jumbo-sized drawing and colored pencils, many with triangular barrels, that I’ve never been able to find a sharpener for. Even my electric Bostitch QuietSharp 6, which accommodates every other pencil I own, doesn’t have a hole big enough for the humongous Koh-I-Noor Triograph drawing pencils or Koh-I-Noor Magic FX rainbow pencils. I also have a Marco Tri-Jumbo rainbow pencil, which has a slightly smaller-diameter barrel than the Koh-I-Noors but is also triangular. These are all pencils I’ve had to sharpen with a knife.

The Moleskine sharpened all three pencils beautifully – both the wood and the core. Traditional carpenter’s pencils do not fit (though I suppose they are intended to be knife-sharpened anyway). I’m very happy to finally have a portable sharpener (or any sharpener) that fits those crazy Koh-I-Noors.

tina-koyamaTina Koyama is an urban sketcher in Seattle. Her blog is Fueled by Clouds & Coffee, and you can follow her on Instagram as Miatagrrl.


DISCLAIMER: The items included in this review were provided free of charge by JetPens for the purpose of review. This review also includes Amazon Affiliate links. (Every little bit helps keep this blog running.) Please see the About page for more details.

Eye Candy: Happy Valentine’s Day (Our Privileg!)

Eye Candy: Happy Valentine’s Day (Our Privileg!)

A very late Valentine’s greeting from The Well-Appointed Desk tapped out on our brand new typewriter. Its a Privileg 270T and its our privilege to tap out our message on this beauty!

I put a fresh pink ribbon on it for Valentine’s Day but you’ll notice that this typewriter does not have a traditional QWERTY keyboard. It has a QWERTZ keyboard. The Y and Z key are transposed and some specifically Germanic character like the ü, ö, and ä appear at the far right of the keyboard.

All the information I could find about the typewriter suggests that the Privileg 270T dates from the 70s and is a Nakajima brand machine badged for the Eastern European market. This machine is in pristine condition and the typeface alone was what made me melt. Then the warm tomato color of the plastic. It has earned “upstairs typewriter” status.

So, be warned, you may get a mailing label or letter tapped out on this beauty with my y’s and z’s all mixed up.

 

Pen Show: LA or Bust!

Laura and I are headed for the LA Pen Show tomorrow. It’s Laura’s first pen show ever and, for me, I think I’ve actually lost count but I think I’ve finally moved past double digits.

We will be at the show for the whole weekend, arriving Thursday night. Laura will be getting the full immersive experience when she’s not spending a little quality time with her family. Her father is bursting with pride that she’s become a “fountain pen person” so he may walk the show with her a bit on Sunday.

We are particularly excited to get out this Midwestern winter, eat some tacos and maybe visit a yarn shop.

If you see either of us during the show, at the bar or anywhere, please stop and say hello. We would love to meet you in person.

Link Love: Pencil Bouquets & Chicago Love

Link Love: Pencil Bouquets & Chicago Love

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