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Robert Brydon @robertbrydon.bsky.social

In practice, that means over the two years, my new inks have been from one of Birmingham, The Wet Pen, Troublemaker, or Colorverse. That or were part of the Enigma Stationery Inkvent set. In some cases, the same in both. But getting The Wet Pen dupes just felt nice to me, about both Enigma and TWP.

aug 24, 2025, 11:00 pm • 3 0

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Kari Dru @karidru.bsky.social

When I first really got into pens, in my area, if you wanted colorful, your choices were Parker penman, which would soon be discontinued, or Herbin. For years I used Lamy black, Waterman blue, Parker ruby, and Herbin poussiere de lune. And I liked them but my rotation is way different now.

aug 24, 2025, 11:05 pm • 1 0 • view
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Kari Dru @karidru.bsky.social

I still use Waterman but Parker Penman's gone, IDK what's going on with Herbin's quality, Lamy's OK but Pilot's more agreeable and Platinum is blacker. Pilot Iroshizuku and Diamine have me covered for no-fuss colors, and thanks to that advent calendar, Teranishi is my new bff.

aug 24, 2025, 11:10 pm • 2 0 • view
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Robert Brydon @robertbrydon.bsky.social

Yeah Teranishi is awesome. I got the Set F calendar, and their Brilliant Mint has been my daily planner go to for like a month now. The only previous Teranishi I had also came through Enigma, albeit in person at a pen show. Their Opera Rose is gorgeous, although closer to a Potter's Pink, IMO.

aug 24, 2025, 11:24 pm • 2 0 • view
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Kari Dru @karidru.bsky.social

I agree it's a potter's pink, tho I don't have either of those; i worried they'd be dark enough with my eyesight. No question they're beautiful tho. I picked up purple, green, sepia, """black""", burgundy, and honey and then told myself to slow my roll.

aug 24, 2025, 11:30 pm • 0 0 • view
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Robert Brydon @robertbrydon.bsky.social

Yeah, I got into them a lot more recently, and my path was looking for more refillable/customizable brush pens (I.e., coming from Tombow, Faber-Castell Pitt, Kuretake's confusing lineup, etc.). Thinking about use with watercolors landed me unfortunately deep in Noodler's to start.

aug 24, 2025, 11:15 pm • 1 0 • view
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Kari Dru @karidru.bsky.social

That makes sense. Noodler wasn't on my radar at all. I don't think they existed yet. I was used to "you simply can't put waterproof ink in any pen but a rapidograph" being an absolute fact of life. Except iron gall which you'd better rinse out at end of day. Other than that I used dip pens.

aug 24, 2025, 11:22 pm • 3 0 • view
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Robert Brydon @robertbrydon.bsky.social

Rinse out iron gall at the end of the day, right. Yes. Of course. That's the only sensible thing to do. *nervously eyes the Preppy on my desk that I inked with R&K Scabiosa last September* The nib isn't slowly dissolving, it's just increasing the channel width for a wetter flow in a Preppy 02/EF!

aug 24, 2025, 11:29 pm • 2 0 • view
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Kari Dru @karidru.bsky.social

I honestly have no idea. That was Montblanc's advice when dealing with their document blue at the time (which no longer contains iron gall). I still adhere to it, but I know a lot of gall inks have changed formula and are gentler, now.

aug 24, 2025, 11:33 pm • 1 0 • view
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Robert Brydon @robertbrydon.bsky.social

I'd certainly not push my luck with a pen I had a sentimental attachment to. While I love my Preppies (and have too many of the Wa designs), I love the concept of them more than any individual pen. If I wreck one with neglect or poor choices, that's absolutely fine, now I've learned their limits.

aug 24, 2025, 11:42 pm • 1 0 • view
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Robert Brydon @robertbrydon.bsky.social

Actually, I'm pretty sure that's not even a joke. It's certainly not worse for the wear, and comparing my initial ink log entry to how it writes today than I remember it working when I first inked it up last year, I think it's better. I did pull the nib out and rinse it off once. Preppy's rule.

aug 24, 2025, 11:34 pm • 1 0 • view