Glass Pen
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Added: 3 years ago
From: henders007
Views: 17,738
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  • Is he using Parker Quick ?

  • His voice. I am in heaven.

  • @Miganishi I think you would find yourself somewhat disappointed if you visited some areas of England; the Yorkshire accent and the east London accent are comparably different to his accent!

  • Glass pens were made in Japan at first.

  • i drop my pen several times a day so... uhh..

  • just don't let it fall on-the-floor!

  • I just got one and I cannot, for the life of me, get it to write anything

  • @robotmonkey73 That happened to me a couple of times. It took me a couple of purchases from different companies to finally get a glass pen that worked well. I find that spending the additional money is well worth it.

  • Am I weird if I comment that I totally love English accent? I live in the US and I still like more how people talk at England.

  • @Miganishi I'm the same way. Their accent makes everything sound better lol. An Englishman can probably sell anything to an American if they just keep talking about it with their accent lol.

  • how much does this pen cost? What type pf ink are you using to write with it?

  • @tedsonleo They aren´t that expensive. My costs 11 euro (= 14,37 us dollar). I got it on a local Christmas fair in Germany. It writes perfect and last for about a half page.

    Sorry for my bad english.

  • @GreyPhoenix117 You mean $14.37right? The way you wrote 14,37 is misleading, as it looks like 14,370. And your English isn't bad.

  • @SirJayDun In some european countries a comma is used in many places where a period is in the US.

  • why a pen of glass wen you can make a pen of a diamond >:D

  • because the nib of the pen in a cone shape wont that make copperplate and calligraphy script difficult to write?

  • @gagafreakbeiber

    It would, but this is meant for mono-line lettering, i.e no line variation except for maybe shading depending on the type of ink you use.

  • Bought one of these yesterday as a Christmas present to myself...they're really quite fun to write with.

  • entirely of "glawss"

  • *whistles*

    If I had a pen like that, I'd be using it every day!

  • I write with this sort of pen very often. I have a number of them.

    They do take practice. Unconnected scripts are also good choices for this type of pen.

  • @Shangas I said the same thing...till I got one lol....I found fountain pens to be much more enjoyable and more convenient

  • @Shangas : I agree. That pen is beautiful! I would do an effort to write with it as often as the place allows it.

  • Interesting. Problem is you can't bend it like a metal nib, huh?

    Looks classy ^_^ Take one of those out when you gotta sign something for the mailman.

  • This is very much a mono-line type of pen. metal nibs and quills give one a more flexible writing style.

  • lol. i et its expensive. i'd never use it though. i'd just show my friends and be like "look at my fancy expensive pen BISHES!"

  • @ECSit it costs $16 or $20 not expensive

  • @ECSit I have one, made by J. Herbin. $15 for the small, $30 for the large. Not expensive, but you'd still not want to break it.

  • Do the nibs wear away after some time?

  • Yes. But it would take decades for this to happen.

  • Wow, I would break it the first time I would use it. It looks so fragile!

  • They are fragile and if the nib is malformed or chipped the pen is usually finished.

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