Pen & Paper
Specimen The Pen Archive Search ⌘K /

Nib
Filler
Flow
Weight
Material
Length
№ 01 · Attributes

Every dimension, measured.

The full reading of the specimen, grouped by concern. Spectrum dots place the specimen on the catalogue's scale.
Identity & Provenance i.

Where the specimen was made, by whom, and which generation it belongs to.

The Nib ii.

The metal between the writer and the page — its size, shape, material, and how willingly it bends.

Ink Delivery iii.

How the pen takes ink, holds it, and releases it under the nib.

Body & Trim iv.

What the pen is made of, how it closes, and how light passes through it.

Dimensions & Weight v.

Every measurement in millimetres and grams, against the archive's range.

Heritage & Lineage vi.

Designer, year released, the family the pen belongs to, and what came before it.

Service & Provenance vii.

Warranty, repair channels, the boxed contents, and where the world stocks it.

Ergonomics & Character viii.

How it sits in the hand — and the editor's reading of its temperament after a month at the desk.

Editor's note · M. Hoshino

A pen that hides its engineering inside a barrel that looks, at first, like a curio. The vacuum's shut-off valve is the reason it survives travel; the soft 14k medium is the reason it survives a long letter.

Recommended inks

  • Iroshizuku Tsuki-yo№ 014
  • Sailor Yama-dori№ 028
  • Diamine Oxblood№ 041
  • Pilot Iro-utsushi Take-sumi№ 022

Notable owners

A long-standing favourite of Japanese novelists and English translators — present, by report, at the writing of more than one Akutagawa-shortlisted manuscript.

№ 02 · On the Page

The same pen, on three different papers.

All samples in Iroshizuku Tsuki-yo, posted grip, indoor 2700K.
№ 03 · Recommended Marriages

Pairings in which the 823 appears.

From the catalog. Listed by affinity.