I have many pens but the Vanishing Point has been a game changer. I am physician and not having to deal with a cap during rounds, while taking notes, is a bonus. Very smooth writer. If you want a big ink reservoir look at a vacuum filler. Sadly, my collection lacks a Pelikan. When looking at nibs Japanese nibs run narrower than European nibs, in general, so, a fine Japanese nib is closer to an EF European nib.
Hey, I’m a medical student; would you recommend the twist action Pilot Fermo for the same purpose? I am afraid the Vanishing Point will be too loud, and I don’t want to irritate anyone whilst doing rounds.
@@gowriwarrier2370 yes I have a Pilot Fermo and is equally useful. The Vanishing Point is quicker but the Fermo works well. No cap to contend with. I have never had anyone complain about the click sound of the Vanishing Point.
I'm a physician and since my internship I was fascinated by the capless/retractable fountain pens! Using them to write and sketch is an unparalleled experience. I started with Majohn's A1s and A2s, then bought my first 18k nib Pilot Capless. Yesterday I received my second Pilot Capless but it was a Steel nib like the one in this video. My next capless pen is rather a bolt action by Ensso, which I'm eagerly waiting for.
@@designook_leo I'd disagree, there's VPs with "special alloy" nibs, like the one in this video. They don't have the carats mentioned on their nibs. These nibs are stiffer, and are basically stainless steel nibs with gold/colored plating. I got this information based on different websites and reddit.
I don't really agree with your info that you got. I know this Pilot VP nib don't specify the nip model or type, because it is an old version. I believe the new version nibs have more detail info. One thing I can tell you, I can feel the different between steal and gold nip. I use Lamy steal nip Vs Pilot VP gold nip and they feel totally different. Or in case there are fake nibs of Pilot VP on the market. I never heard of fake nip, only whole fake pen like Chinese version which I forget the name.
Hey, I’m a medical student; would you recommend the twist action Pilot Fermo for the same purpose? I am afraid the Vanishing Point will be too loud, and I don’t want to irritate anyone whilst doing rounds.
@@gowriwarrier2370 Well as far as I've read, fermo will require 2 hand operation, so I didn't think of buying it. I didn't find the clicking sound of the VP too irritating though honestly. I've also used the Moonman A1's and if you want you can try them out. Ensso bolt is another good option for retractable fountain pens.
I have the Pelikan M200 in copper and rose gold, the anticipation for the release date was crazy and then when I actually received it I took months to ink it up 🤦🏽♀️ I chose extra fine and I am very happy with that choice. I didn’t love it straight away as I had high expectations with it being my first ‘proper’ Pelikan fountain pen but after a month it has really grown on me. I hope you manage to add one to your collection and enjoy it as much as I do
I think its true! You need a knockaround pen, a slightly nicer pen and a luxury pen. I use my knockaround pen at work and out at cafes, while my nicer pen is for journalling and my luxury pen is for pretty cards or fancy writing for friends and family. I like to get a slightly cooler nib for a luxury pen, maybe a stub for some fun line work or a flex nib.
I love Pilot pens in general and you can’t beat the capless for practicality, but I prefer the slimmer, lighter Decimo. I also love Pelikans, and the M600 series is my go to pen for journaling and note-taking. The M800 series is beautiful, but a bit big for me.
Man I think I have seen an bend in your Lamy Nib by after applying pressure with the cap. I am Lucky that I am Born in India because I can have Click fountain pens , especially Hauser Germany and flair fountain pen having similar design of Lamy safari nib and grip section and window section along with similar converter for less than an USD their is afcource quality difference in that but it has iridium coated steel nibs and writes cool.
No bend with right amount of pressure. If you afraid to bend the nip, you can use tap to stick and pull out the nip. At that moment I didn’t have any tap near me, so I used that method to remove.
@@designook_leo I am using an fountain pen from Indian made brand called click aristocrat . It just price 4.17 USD and the nib unit if needed price 2.98 USD. I just want to roll out the nib unit insert new nib unit. Its kind of Vintage pen , I quited Parker,cross,shaeffer because of local brands in India producing exceptional pens in affordable price their are also local manufacturers like Ranga which is damn expensive and only dell to USA,EUROPE ETC.I now use Hausier Germany made in India fountain pen which is an modernised version of chineseHero pen and click fountain pens etc. I want to buy 5 piece of cLICK STUDENT fountain pen because itscheap and best in its price range 1.19USD . I am lucky that I am born in India I canhave quality fountain pens in affordable price.
That poor Lamy nib! You bent it removing it with the cap @ 02:15. A much safer way is sticking some sellotape to the top of it and using that to pull it off.
I also stated in the video. Lamy: Everyday use such as Sketching, drawing or some writing Pilot VP: Long form writing is great Pelikan M200: I will use it for special even such as book signation Am I answer your question?
Would like to completely agree that you only need 3 pens, but completely disagree on which. Pen 1 could be a nice large volume writer for sitting down and filling some pages. Something like a twsbi 580 but there are hundreds of options. Pen 2 could be something for travel, whether a vac filler or cartridge from AE that was only $5 and you don't mind losing and won't leak. Pen 3 for edc use, super compact. Could be a sport, traveler's, etc.
@@designook_leo Yes, sure. That's why Lamy pens come with extra supply of caps, for removing nibs. Oh.. wait... those are soft sticky strips of silicon, not hard caps. nvmd
@@designook_leo the pen is nice but that triangular grip is tragic. Really a do not understand that they have not an section option. They sell very well so we, perhaps, will never see it happening.
I see you have a point of view for that. I believe they keep doing it because not so many people complain about that. Honestly, I don't have any problem with the Lamy grip too. In case you want other style of grip, you have to use other model or other brand.
The vanishing point is so smooth and the mechanism operates flawlessly. If I could only have one, this would be it.
Totally agree. I enjoy using it for long writing.
I have many pens but the Vanishing Point has been a game changer. I am physician and not having to deal with a cap during rounds, while taking notes, is a bonus. Very smooth writer. If you want a big ink reservoir look at a vacuum filler. Sadly, my collection lacks a Pelikan. When looking at nibs Japanese nibs run narrower than European nibs, in general, so, a fine Japanese nib is closer to an EF European nib.
Do you plan to get a Pelikan? What model and nib type will you choose?
@@designook_leo I probably won’t get a Pelican because the size I like is too pricey.
Beside M200 version, the price really pricey for Pelikan. But I heard Pelikan steal nip also good.
Hey, I’m a medical student; would you recommend the twist action Pilot Fermo for the same purpose? I am afraid the Vanishing Point will be too loud, and I don’t want to irritate anyone whilst doing rounds.
@@gowriwarrier2370 yes I have a Pilot Fermo and is equally useful. The Vanishing Point is quicker but the Fermo works well. No cap to contend with. I have never had anyone complain about the click sound of the Vanishing Point.
I'm a physician and since my internship I was fascinated by the capless/retractable fountain pens! Using them to write and sketch is an unparalleled experience.
I started with Majohn's A1s and A2s, then bought my first 18k nib Pilot Capless. Yesterday I received my second Pilot Capless but it was a Steel nib like the one in this video.
My next capless pen is rather a bolt action by Ensso, which I'm eagerly waiting for.
All pilot capes are using gold nib.
@@designook_leo I'd disagree, there's VPs with "special alloy" nibs, like the one in this video. They don't have the carats mentioned on their nibs. These nibs are stiffer, and are basically stainless steel nibs with gold/colored plating.
I got this information based on different websites and reddit.
I don't really agree with your info that you got. I know this Pilot VP nib don't specify the nip model or type, because it is an old version. I believe the new version nibs have more detail info.
One thing I can tell you, I can feel the different between steal and gold nip. I use Lamy steal nip Vs Pilot VP gold nip and they feel totally different. Or in case there are fake nibs of Pilot VP on the market. I never heard of fake nip, only whole fake pen like Chinese version which I forget the name.
Hey, I’m a medical student; would you recommend the twist action Pilot Fermo for the same purpose? I am afraid the Vanishing Point will be too loud, and I don’t want to irritate anyone whilst doing rounds.
@@gowriwarrier2370 Well as far as I've read, fermo will require 2 hand operation, so I didn't think of buying it.
I didn't find the clicking sound of the VP too irritating though honestly.
I've also used the Moonman A1's and if you want you can try them out.
Ensso bolt is another good option for retractable fountain pens.
I have the Pelikan M200 in copper and rose gold, the anticipation for the release date was crazy and then when I actually received it I took months to ink it up 🤦🏽♀️ I chose extra fine and I am very happy with that choice. I didn’t love it straight away as I had high expectations with it being my first ‘proper’ Pelikan fountain pen but after a month it has really grown on me. I hope you manage to add one to your collection and enjoy it as much as I do
Thank you for your suggestion. Does it write smoothly with EF nib? I’m consider to have F nib for smoother.
I think its true! You need a knockaround pen, a slightly nicer pen and a luxury pen. I use my knockaround pen at work and out at cafes, while my nicer pen is for journalling and my luxury pen is for pretty cards or fancy writing for friends and family. I like to get a slightly cooler nib for a luxury pen, maybe a stub for some fun line work or a flex nib.
I believe in simplify. Make everything as simple as possible.
I love Pilot pens in general and you can’t beat the capless for practicality, but I prefer the slimmer, lighter Decimo. I also love Pelikans, and the M600 series is my go to pen for journaling and note-taking. The M800 series is beautiful, but a bit big for me.
True
Man I think I have seen an bend in your Lamy Nib by after applying pressure with the cap. I am Lucky that I am Born in India because I can have Click fountain pens , especially Hauser Germany and flair fountain pen having similar design of Lamy safari nib and grip section and window section along with similar converter for less than an USD their is afcource quality difference in that but it has iridium coated steel nibs and writes cool.
No bend with right amount of pressure. If you afraid to bend the nip, you can use tap to stick and pull out the nip. At that moment I didn’t have any tap near me, so I used that method to remove.
@@designook_leo I am using an fountain pen from Indian made brand called click aristocrat . It just price 4.17 USD and the nib unit if needed price 2.98 USD. I just want to roll out the nib unit insert new nib unit. Its kind of Vintage pen , I quited Parker,cross,shaeffer because of local brands in India producing exceptional pens in affordable price their are also local manufacturers like Ranga which is damn expensive and only dell to USA,EUROPE ETC.I now use Hausier Germany made in India fountain pen which is an modernised version of chineseHero pen and click fountain pens etc. I want to buy 5 piece of cLICK STUDENT fountain pen because itscheap and best in its price range 1.19USD . I am lucky that I am born in India I canhave quality fountain pens in affordable price.
I’m also in India! Which inexpensive retractable fountain pen are you referring to; I’d love to try it!
I use LAMY.
Great
Amazing
Thank you! Cheers!
That poor Lamy nib! You bent it removing it with the cap @ 02:15. A much safer way is sticking some sellotape to the top of it and using that to pull it off.
Thank you for the tip.
It didn’t bend as i didn’t put strong pressure on it.
Would like to know what use case cover each of the 3 pens
I don’t use case cover. For pilot, I put it back to the box after use.
@@designook_leo No, I mean, the purpose or situational use of each one.
I also stated in the video.
Lamy: Everyday use such as Sketching, drawing or some writing
Pilot VP: Long form writing is great
Pelikan M200: I will use it for special even such as book signation
Am I answer your question?
@@designook_leo Yeah, totally! Thank you for the insightful answer, keep making these amazing videos!
Thank you for your kind words. I will do my best to share what are useful and helpful.
Would like to completely agree that you only need 3 pens, but completely disagree on which.
Pen 1 could be a nice large volume writer for sitting down and filling some pages. Something like a twsbi 580 but there are hundreds of options.
Pen 2 could be something for travel, whether a vac filler or cartridge from AE that was only $5 and you don't mind losing and won't leak.
Pen 3 for edc use, super compact. Could be a sport, traveler's, etc.
Every pen is reference. You can choose whatever you like in each tier base on your requirement.
Price??
What price do you want to know?
I‘m sorry, but that‘s the worst way to change a Lamy nib. Geez.
Yes, agree. It look serious and it is a quick way that not require other tools. As long as you do it gently, it will be fined.
Never remove nib like that, what a horrible advise!
For Lamy is not a big deal to remove like that. It is totally safe as long as you do gently.
@@designook_leo Yes, sure. That's why Lamy pens come with extra supply of caps, for removing nibs. Oh.. wait... those are soft sticky strips of silicon, not hard caps. nvmd
Lamy safari, noooo
Are you on team safari?
@@designook_leo the pen is nice but that triangular grip is tragic. Really a do not understand that they have not an section option. They sell very well so we, perhaps, will never see it happening.
I see you have a point of view for that. I believe they keep doing it because not so many people complain about that. Honestly, I don't have any problem with the Lamy grip too. In case you want other style of grip, you have to use other model or other brand.
@@designook_leo , surelly. 2000 is a good option. Safaris ok pens, just that grip that is tragic, the pen itself is very well tuned.
2000 is a flagship product, so can’t compare to starter version. :)