Pilot Juice 0.5 Pen Review

Pilot Juice 0.5 pens

As promised on Friday, I am reviewing the new-to-me Pilot Juice 0.5 gel pens. The pens look like a lot of the Japanese gel pens on the market but I thought I’d give them a try. What I didn’t realize until I started writing this, is that the inks in the Juice are water-resistant and fade-resistant. Well, that’s a notable difference!

The bodies of the pens are clear plastic with a silicone grip area that coordinates with the ink color and matches the retractable clicker. The clip on the pens are spring loaded so that they can easily be clipped to a thick notebook cover or binder.

I purchased a blue-black 0.5 and a leaf green 0.5 (I couldn’t help myself!).

Pilot Juice 0.5 pens close-up

The tips look like a standard rollerball mechanism. This close-up reveals the very subtle dot pattern on the silicone grips.

Pilot Juice 0.5 pens writing sample

In writing tests, the pens wrote well. Smooth, with no clumping or skipping.The blue-black is more of a navy blue to me but a good color anyway. Just a brighter more vivid blue than the other blue-black gel ink I’ve used. I included a sample of the Uni-Ball Style Fit Blue-Black for comparison which is more of a grayed-out blue.

The leaf green ink was much lighter than I thought it would be and it photographed even lighter. It is somewhat legible on the paper but not at all legible in the photo. It was the darker of the two yellow-green colors available in the Juice line but its still not the perfect green.

After I photographed everything I did test the pens for water-resistance and they do resist water which makes them suitable for signing documents and addressing envelopes.

Each color is available for $1.65 each and are currently only available in the 0.5 size. The pens can be unscrewed and a new refill put in but currently only red, blue and black refils are available.

(This pen was tested on the Miquelrius medium flexible 300 grid paper book purchased from B+N.)

Plugging the Firm: Hallmark Blank Journals

Hallmark journals

I recently discovered a whole end-cap at the Hallmark Gold Crown Store of blank journals. There were lots of fun patterns and designs. Some were hardcover or soft cover, some with elastics and others with ribbon bookmarks. I couldn’t limit myself to just one. So I bought three. All three journals (a fancy term for blank notebooks) were approx. 6″x8″ and contain 160 pages. The paper feels weighty — thicker than the paper in the Piccadilly I reviewed last week.

Inside Hallmark journals

Inside, each book had different printed lines and designs — some were simpler than others. The three I purchased were each different.

The purple floral book has an embossed, hard paperboard cover with an ecru colored paper lined with light purple dashed lines.There is a matching blue-violet elastic running vertically on the back to hold the book closed.

The Indian print design is a flexible cardstock embossed with glossy patterns. Inside, the pages are varied with 4 different designs over two page spreads in lime, blue, orange and pink with Indian patterns along the edges with coordinating dashed lines. It has a bright pink elastic to hold it closed.

Inside Hallmark journals

My favorite inside designs were in the yellow-and-black zig zag cover of the Peanuts “Schulz” journal. The pages are off-white and have gray dotted lines which are flanked by Charlie Brown and Snoopy yelling across from the lower left hand page to the lower right hand page.

Back pocket on the Schulz Peanuts journal

The back pocket on the Peanuts journal has tone-on-tone red dots and the Charlie Brown and Snoopy doing the happy dance on the pocket on the back cover. Along the spine is the Schulz signature.

Indian print journal pocket

The Indian print notebook has a yellow print pocket that matches the inside covers.

Purple floral journal pocket

The purple floral book has a coordinating pattern on the inside covers and the gusseted pocket on the back cover carries the pattern as well.

Indian print journal pen tests

Now, the big test is how well does the paper take ink? I tested the Indian print journal first and was surprised how well it took ink.

Indian print journal reverse of pen test

From the back of the page, the only show through was the alcohol-based marker pen. All the fountain pen ink did not bleed or feather or show-through. I suspect a very wide nib, dark black ink might show through on the back of the page but I was quite pleased with the paper overall. The patterns are fun and make it enjoyable to flip the page and see the new color.

Purple floral journal pen tests

The next book I tested was the purple floral journal and expected it to perform very similarly to the Indian print journal but the paper seemed to have some sort of coating on the paper that caused the ink to bead and dry very slowly. It did not work well with any of my fountain pens but the gel pens behaved just fine.

Purple floral reverse of pen tests

Again, on the reverse, I had very little show-through except the alcohol-based marker (i.e. a Sharpie marker) but the water-resistance of the paper makes me sad about this journal.

Peanuts Journal Pen Tests

With trepidation, I put pen to paper on the Peanuts journal and was delighted to discover that it behaved like the Indian print notebook. Fountain pen ink was acceptable easily and there was no feathering or much show-through.

Peanuts reverse of pen tests

In retrospect, when touching the paper only, the Peanuts notebook and the Indian print notebook have a soft powdery feel while the purple floral notebook paper feels very smooth. So, if you decide to peruse the selection at your nearest Hallmark Gold Crown store and fountain pen use is something you want in a notebook, rub the paper between your fingers to see how it feels.

There were lots of other designs to choose from — an array of patterns, cover materials and lines inside– at the Hallmark Gold Crown Store. All the books sold for $11.95.

Ink Drop: March 2013

Ink Drop March 2013

Once again, I am woefully behind on posting the Goulet Pens Ink Drop reveals. At least, I’m not spoiling the surprise for anyone who is waiting for their colors to arrive in the post this way.

This month was the darkest of the darks, called Fade to Black, to go along with everyone’s murky feeling about the gray, slushy March we faced. Hopefully, as it is now April, we can all look at these dark colors as sharp and crispy and not sad and depressing.

I’m always so surprised how different each shade of black can be. This month included three blacks: Pilot Namiki, Monteverde and Lamy, each with its own subtle color difference. The Pilot Namiki black seems to be the most neutral black of the three with the Monteverde having a purplish cast and the Lamy black being more of a dark gray. There are dozens upon dozens of other black inks on the market so it could take a lifetime to find the one that is “just right” but these are definitely a nice range. The Pilot Namiki black was the most water-resistant of the three if that’s a factor for you.

The other inks included were the De Atramentis Silver Grey which is a cool neutral gray and the Diamine Graphite which is a greenish gray in the Q-tip smudge but looks like a green-black in the writing sample.

If you are looking for a smart, professional ink for your fountain pen, any one of these would be appropriate.

Sailor Desk Pen EF Review

Sailor Desk Pen with cap

The Sailor Desk Pen EF doesn’t look like much with its fleshy-colored, plastic cap but under that cap is what makes this sub-$20 pen such a little gem. It does not have any fancy packaging and even the two black cartridges that came with the pen came in a plain plastic bag but for less than $20, I do hope more effort is put into the nib than the packaging. Its a simple, black plastic body with a white plastic dot on the end. Its a long tapered pen designed to fit into a desk pen holder (imagine the registry desk of a fine hotel).

Sailor Desk Pen

The gold tone F-4 EF Sailoir nib is the smoothest, finest nib I’ve used.

Sailor Desk Pen nib close-up

Sailor Desk Pen nib close-up

Sailor Desk Pen EF

I was stunned at how smoothly the Sailor Desk Pen writes on paper. From the minute I put the Sailor cartridge into it, it wrote. Perfectly. For such a fine nib, I expected it to be scratchier but its not. Compared to my Pilot Prera, this is much smoother! I don’t feel like I’m stabbing the paper or catching fibers as I write. Sadly, my Prera is still in the exhibit at work so I couldn’t do a side-by-side comparison.

The long slender shaping makes it easy to hold and write. The length gives it a nice balance and weight in the hand.

Sailor Desk Pen writing sample

I did compare it to my EF nib Kaweco and the Sailor is noticeably finer. The closest comparison to the fineness I could find was a 0.38 gel pen like the Uni-Ball Style Fit in blue-black.

If you have been looking for a FINE fountain pen, this is the best I’ve found at a very low, low price.

($16.50 from JetPens)

Today’s a Good Pen Day!

good pen day photo

Look what just arrived in the post today! New tools from JetPens to be reviewed this weekend. In the mix is the Ohto Ceramic Pencutter recommended by Donovan at the Letter Writers Alliance, two Pilot Juice 0.5 gel pens in leaf green and blue black, a Uniball Signo DX 0.38 in Pantone-Color-of-the-Year Jade and a Kokuyo Kadokeshi Stick lime green twistable mini plastic eraser.

Hope you had a good pen day too!

Kickstarter: IPX-PRO Notebook Covers

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Have you ever wished that your notebook had a more durable cover? If so, then you may be interested in the latest Kickstarter project called the IPX-PRO. These all metal covers will be available in two sizes to fit a pocket-sized (3.5″x5.5″) or A5 (roughly 5″X8″) notebooks and in silver or black. These covers will protect the corner from being bent and provide a solid hi-tech look to your low-tech tool.

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There is just ten days left on this Kickstarter project so if its something you might be interested in supporting, you’ve still got time. Just $49 will secure a small, silver, pocket-sized cover (and their very own notebook) when the product goes into production.

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