Category Archives: Meta-review

Conway Stewart Winston fountain pen review

A little bit of history  Back in the early twentieth century, there were several great British fountain pen manufacturers, and although debate will rage ad infinitum about who was the greatest, Conway Stewart is usually in most people’s top five or so brands from the period.  Like so many famous names of the era, it died a death at least in part due to the ghastly machinations of László Bíró, only to be reborn earlier this century.  The reanimated Conway Stewart, based in Devon, could no longer claim to make the ‘all-British pen’ (the nibs were made on the continent), but they certainly turned out a decent range of very attractive writing equipment – ironically including some bodies adapted for the dreaded alternative to a proper pen, but we’ll have to overlook that.  The new CS pens were made of a fine range of materials, and this caught the attention of many a fan, but may also have been part of its undoing; lacking an affordable end to its range it was always a high-margin but low-volume business, depending heavily upon exports, and it only took a fluctuation in currency exchange rates for feast to turn to famine.  When the reborn brand was wound up last year, a number of enterprising firms bought up machinery, rod stock, and parts for partially-assembled pens, and one of these operators, Bespoke British Pens, has been trickling out a modest but interesting line of cannibalised Conways for the last few months.  We couldn’t resist trying one out.

Beginning
Yes, we’re assuming it was THAT Winston

How it looks  Big, shiny, solid and posh.  Those resins are hard to capture in the camera, but they do reflect the light nicely and that Conway Stewart nib really sets it off to perfection.  The only slight drawback may be the simplicity of the nib presentation, which some of our reviewers felt was a little under-ornamented.  The union jack etched onto the nib would have pleased Winston, of course, although he may have raised a wry smile to find that (being a Bock) it was made in Germany.  Overall, it looks expensive – which it is, really, but we’ll come on to that later.

Winston posted
Plenty of class (specifically, aristocrat)

How it feels  Again, big – and fairly hefty.  Neither was a problem as far as any of our reviewers were concerned; indeed we all found it sat very comfortably in the hand and felt ready for a good long writing session.  Some of these pens – but not all – still have Conway Stewart imprints and limited-edition numbers engraved into the barrel.

Ruth writing
Winston visits the valleys

How it fills  It’s a piston-filler.  The piston in question is essentially a decent captive converter, so the ink capacity is perhaps not as great as that in one of the bigger TWSBIs, for instance, but it takes on enough ink to keep going for a fair while.  The piston screw is hidden under a blind cap, which would be all too easy to lose – but it does keep the lines of the pen nicely rounded.

Filler screw
Winston was known for his prodigious thirst

Crucially, how it writes…  Not all the spare parts were available in the same quantities, so Bespoke British Pens soon found themselves running out of an essential component – nibs!  They seem to have made a virtue out of a crisis here by getting in touch with the original nib suppliers and procuring a unit with longer tines, which makes for a civilised semi-flex performance.  It’s not as noodle-soft as the likes of the Pilot FA nib, so it can be used for everyday writing but there’s a decent degree of line variation available when you want it, without requiring too much effort.

Writing sample in Deep Dark Orange copy

Pen! What is it good for?  Now, flex isn’t everyone’s favourite thing, and even a rather civilised flex nib like this won’t be too everyone’s taste – indeed, some of our reviewers felt this was a nice pen to play with but really not their bag for keeps.  But one of us thought that it deserved a new category: ‘everyday flex’.  A serious, big pen with a nib which offers flex but behaves well enough to use for ordinary note-taking and writing is not so easy to find – even if, at this price, you probably won’t want to take it out and about with you often.

Barrel branding
Winston, you’re insufferable! If I was married to you I’d poison your coffee…

VFM  This is a tougher question.  At a ticket price of £450 there’s no getting away from it; this is a very expensive pen.  We think the materials, the quality of workmanship and the relative scarcity of materials do justify a premium price, although probably more at the £350 level really.  Whether you feel it’s worth such a lot of money is, as always, very much a personal matter; it could be good value if it’s your dream pen, but if it’s not all that then you could get two or three good pens for the same money.  Of our test panel, two were happy to play with it and pass it on… and one of us smashed the piggy-bank and bought one!

brown Winston profile
…and if I was married to you, Madam, I’d drink it!

If this isn’t quite your cup of tea, but almost…  There’s no point splashing out this much if it isn’t absolutely right for you, of course.  In truth, the Winston seems to be one of the most popular CS models amongst fountain pen aficionados, but the similarly large Churchill brings a flat-top cap to the collection, and there are several smaller models still available for those who find this a bit unwieldy – all the way down to the diminutive Dandy. If a big, expensive, British pen is on your bucket list but for some reason Conway Stewart doesn’t cut the mustard, Onoto and Yard-o-Led are also still out there – and we’ll get on to reviewing their competing offers in the months ahead if we can find a way to do it.

Beaches
Standby Alexandra Palace, broadcasting in one minute’s time

Our overall recommendation  Think before you press the button, as ever. Unfortunately there are few opportunities to try this before purchase, so an honest calculation about your own needs and resources is the order of the day.  If you like flex nibs and can sensibly afford one of these (preferably without triggering marital disharmony), go for it; this is quite a pen!  If flex isn’t really your thing, or you have any doubts about whether you’ll get enough mileage out of this to justify the cost, be careful.

The BBP ‘flag’ flex nib in all its glory

Where to get hold of one  Other by-products made from salvaged CS components are also available, and if we get our hands on them we’ll review those too.  But in the meantime, if you’re after this particular combination with the ‘flag’ flex nib, you’ll need to go directly to Bespoke British Pens.

Even the clip is as pompous as Blenheim Palace

This meta-review references:

Thanks to  David at Bespoke British Pens for kindly lending us a splendid brown Winston for its little tour around Britain.

Italix English Curate fountain pen review

A little bit of history British fountain pen manufacturers are a rare breed these days.  One of the last to go was Sigma, but the plans for their Rhapsody model live on and have been revived by Italix, the small firm responsible for the Parson’s Essential – which is already quietly famous in our little FP-universe.  The plans, and indeed some of the old workforce, have come together to produce a pen almost entirely produced in the UK.  The only part of the pen sourced abroad is the Bock nib but even that receives regrinding on this little island to achieve the smoothness this brand is known for.  So, things are looking good for anyone wanting to indulge in a spot of flag-waving but, naturally enough, the producers are hoping it will sell as an export too – and to that end, we were grateful when PJ Ford, aka ‘Mr. Pen’, sent us an early test unit to put through its paces.

Announcing the Curate
Announcing the Curate

How it looks Gently sparkly, in a way which is difficult to capture on the camera to be honest.  There is a depth to the sparkle that you can only really get by twirling the pen in sunlight.  But the mottled-tortoise brown is rather tasteful.  Several of us have been tempted by one of the other new colours, the rosy pink ‘candy’ version, and apparently other hues are on their way too.  It does look quite distinctive; there’s not much exactly like this out there.

Curate at rest
Curate at rest

How it feels Solid and nicely-balanced: the cap posts very securely, thanks to an internal spring holding it in place, and the design has been well thought-through.  It’s clearly designed to be used posted but it’s comfortable unposted too.  The metal section is not to everyone’s taste; some found it too narrow for comfort, others have experienced a bit of slipperiness.  But it does feel well-built and likely to last.

Pen to paper
Pen to paper

How it fills This is a straightforward cartridge/converter number.  It comes with a decent quality Schmidt converter and there’s really nothing to complain about there!

Crucially, how it writes… Smoothly – very, very smoothly.  It can even cope with ink which has been brazenly polluted with sparkly particles, like J. Herbin’s Emerald of Chivor, which it takes in its stride like this:

Writing sample
Writing sample

Pen! What is it good for? That probably depends upon your choice of nib, of which there are many.  With a standard round nib it probably would indeed be just the thing for a curate to record PCC minutes with, or even for signing the parish register.  With one of the wide range of italic nibs it’s probably a pen for fun.  The nibs are good value in their own right, so it’s perfectly possible to buy both and stay, err, agnostic.

Value For Money Pretty good, particularly considering it’s manufactured in the UK. Labour costs alone mean that this could never be as cheap as a pen largely sourced from Chinese components but the quality is also likely to meet your expectations as a result.  It’s not an ultra-cheap pen, certainly, but it’s far from the luxury market that Conway Stewart tried to survive within (more on that in a future meta-review). Many of us have been tempted to indulge, at least!

If this isn’t quite your cup of tea, but almost… There are still some ‘new-old stock’ Sigmas on the Italix retail site or you could try the cheaper Parson’s Essential to see if Mr.Pen’s nibs suit you.

Curate in the sun

Our overall recommendation Parts of it are excellent… but nothing about the curate’s pen is a curate’s egg!   Apart from that metal section there is little reason to hesitate here, and a lot to like.

Where to get hold of one This pen was only available direct from Mr. Pen himself – who has now sadly retired, taking the brand with him. One lucky reader won our test unit, however, by responding to our call for advise about what pen one should have stashed in one’s cassock.

Gosh that nib is smooth

This meta-review references:

Bi-colour nib
Bi-colour nib, don’t you know…

Thanks to  ‘Mr Pen’, aka PJ Ford, for kindly supplying the pen for our reviews (and indeed for the amazing give-away).

And the winner is: 

Well done to johnthemonkey who said:

I think a Burgundy Kaweco sport would be the understated, classic choice.

We hope you enjoy the pen as much as we all did!

Pelikan M205 Amethyst fountain pen review

A little bit of history  Pelikan are already famous as the pre-eminent purveyors of the smoothly-tuned piston-filler, from the small but perfectly formed M200 to the huge M1000.  We’d have to get around to reviewing one sooner or later, but Pelikan forced the issue somewhat with one of their limited editions, in a nice dark purple.  Be fair now – you couldn’t expect us to say no, could you?  Thanks to a bit of help from the very lovely Pure Pens of Pontrypidd (who sell Pelikans – have your guessed their favourite letter?), we have been playing with two fine examples with very different nibs – but we’ll come on to that in a minute.  First, the eye candy!

Amethyst M205
Amethyst M205

How it looks  The sophisticated end of purple, this is a serious amethyst shade rather than brash violet, so any chaps who feel overly protective about their masculinity have nothing to fear.  But according to our panel, it also still looks ‘fun’, which is a difficult quality to define, but if it can achieve that at the same time as exuding luxury, it‘s getting something right.  The preposterously swanky packaging doesn’t hurt, either.

Nib and section
Nib and section

How it feels  It’s a shapely pen which feels like it’s built to last a lifetime, and probably will.  Whether it’s the right size for you is quite a personal matter – this is the smallest end of the Pelikan range, of course.  The majority of our reviewers found it just perfect, but one of us found it a bit too small for longer-term comfort – but then again, he thinks Sailor’s ‘King of Pen’ is a perfectly sensible size.  There’s no accounting for taste.  What the M205 definitely doesn’t feel, however, is cheap.

Italic nib close-up
Italic nib close-up

How it fills  A piston, obviously.  Until TWSBI came along Pelikan pretty much monopolised the piston-fill market, and they do it well.  The actual ink capacity is not earth-shattering, but it still opens more options than reliance upon over-priced cartridges would do.  The piston itself is smooth and authoritative in action, and doesn’t feel like it’s going to let the user down any time soon.

Crucially, how it writes…  Very well indeed.  But exactly how depends upon your choice of nib, of course.  Ruth was most impressed with the smooth but surprisingly generous steel EF nib, and you can watch it gliding suavely over the page in her video (links below).  Scribble and Stuart opted for a ‘stub’ italic nib personally ground-down from a BB nib by Ross at pure Pens, which retains a little bit of spring and is a nib full of ‘character’.  Either way, using this brings a bit of a smile, somehow.

M205 italic writing sample
M205 italic writing sample

Pen! What is it good for?  With a ‘sensible’ nib in, you could probably just about get away with taking this to work – although in this case it may depend upon your profession!  On the whole, this one’s probably a nice one to have safely wrapped in a pocket or hand-bag for when you need to scribble a few notes while out and about.  Longer-writing sessions may be possible too, for scribblers with smaller hands.

Ruth showing off what the EF can do
Ruth showing off what the EF can do

VFM  TWSBI do a similar job as the M200 for half the price, so the unusual colour and trim of the M205 goes some way to justify the premium price of the Pelikan in this case.  It really does look better in purple and chrome!  It’s not a cheap pen, but if you are after a special nib (like that ‘Cymrucised’ italic) and you want it connected to a proper piston system, this is a good choice.

If this isn’t quite your cup of tea, but almost…  If price is the problem, try a TWSBI; the 580, Mini or Eco are all good introductions to piston-fillers and have a decent range of nibs too.  If you’re not so partial to purple, other M200 specials come and go with the seasons, so wait for a while and something else will be along soon enough.  If you want something bigger, Pelikan have three sizes of piston-filler above this – and if you’re keen for us to review them, just let us know…

Cap detail - spot the pelican
Cap detail – spot the pelican

Our overall recommendation  This one’s ideal if you feel like treating yourself to something unusual without completely smashing the overdraft limit.  If you like to have fun with proper pens rather than only thinking about office-work and calligraphy, and if you like purple of course, get one.

Where to get hold of one  As they helped us get hold of two of these smashers to review, we’re naturally going to name-check Pure Pens here – and if you want that specially-ground italic, their pelikanpens.co.uk subsidiary is literally the only place to go.  Other specialist fountain pen retailers including Cult Pens and The Writing Desk also stock the purple M205 in the UK, and at the time of writing it’s £90 at all of the above for one of the standard steel nibs.

…and now you want one too, eh?

This meta-review references:

Thanks to  Pure Pens for pulling out all the stops to get a couple of review samples into our paws.  By the way, if you’d like to see what this company offers, orders over £10 will be getting a 10% discount for the next few weeks for United Inkdom readers – just use the code  “UNITED10”  (all capital letters) and enjoy!

Lamy Accent fountain pen review

A little bit of history  Lamy have been making pens in Germany since 1930, when a Herr Joseph Lamy, then working for Parker Pens, no less, bought up another pen company and went into business.  Joseph, and then his son, Manfred, ran the company for 76 years.  In that time they produced one of the most respected fountain pens there is, the 2000 – its 1966 design still looking fresh and modern – as well as what is perhaps one of the most easily recognised, almost ubiquitous, fountain pens, the Safari.  This particular model isn’t so well known but a reader asked if we could look at it and, thanks to Cult Pens kindly sending us review samples, we’re glad to be able to share our thoughts on the Lamy Accent.

How it looks  Very similar to a lot of other Lamy pens, actually.  The wooden grip is pretty stylish and offsets the sleek palladium barrel.  In our collective opinion, it’s reminiscent of a 1970s hotel lobby, which is no bad thing, forty years on.

Accent pic

How it feels  Hmm… not so great for us, sadly.  The grip is high, hard and comparatively wide, which meant none of us found it very comfortable to write with.  But we found friends who really liked it, so if you hold your pen high up – perhaps for drawing with – it might suit you better.  When posted, the pen is a little long for some, but unposted it’s a good weight and length.

Lamy Accent review

How it fills  As with all Lamys in this price bracket, the Accent is a cartridge/converter affair, using Lamy’s own versions of each.  Our pens came with converters (the Z26 version) and they’re good and reliable, holding a reasonable amount of ink. (The Z26 converter will fit any of Lamy’s c/c pens but, be warned, the Z24 version used in Safaris will not fit the Accent.)

Crucially, how it writes…  The reader who asked us to review the Accent liked the MK nib, with its round-balled tip, and this has now become the shape for the standard M nib, although a side by side comparison suggests the MK is a little wider. Flow is good and it writes nicely. As with all Lamy pens in this price range (and below), nibs are easily interchanged and are very good value.

MK test

Pen! What is it good for?  It looks great but we found it rather uncomfortable for extended periods of writing – so we’d say it’s best for quick notes or sketching.

VFM  The Accent is well-made, from good quality materials, but it’s hard to justify spending this much money for a pen if you’re not going to keep using it.  Much depends upon whether that unusual grip suits your style.Accent sampleIf this isn’t quite your cup of tea, but almost…   Lamy produce a lot of similar-looking pens without the bulging grip, the Logo being particularly good.  If wood and shiny metal is your thing, the Faber-Castell Ambition is a similar price and looks fantastic.  It’s quite possible that the version of the Lamy Accent with the rubber grip is more comfortable, too.

Our overall recommendation  Definitely try before you buy.  If you get on with the grip then it’s a good solid choice, but if you find it as uncomfortable as we did, you may not be delighted.
Lamy Accent deconstructedWhere to get hold of one
  We’re very grateful to Cult Pens for donating these pens for review – we’re all impressed customers and generally feel that you can’t go too far wrong there!  If you want to shop around then, to be honest, it’s hard to find a fountain pen shop anywhere that doesn’t stock Lamy pens.  That seems like a vote of confidence in itself.

This meta-review references:

Thanks to Cult Pens for providing the pens we reviewed, at double-quick speed too – that really helps us.  Thanks to them for providing the Deep Dark inks, too – see the details of an exciting give-away just below!

Giveaway!  Cult Pens, in conjunction with Diamine, have their very own range of “Deep Dark” inks: Deep Dark Blue, Brown, Purple, Orange, Green and Red.  They have very kindly offered up a set of all six of these inks, in 30ml bottles, for one lucky reader.  Entries have now closed, and we’ll be in touch with the lucky winner soon.  Just to make sense of the comments below, we asked entrants to tell us which Diamine ink colour was there favourite.  We had a little think about what our own favourite Diamine inks are and came up with: Imperial Purple – Scribble, Asa Blue – Ruth, Twilight – Ian (who really couldn’t make up his mind and wanted to pick Autumn Oak and China Blue too, but that’s not allowed).  As for our readers’ choices, well, they’re illuminating.

TWSBI ECO fountain pen review

A little bit of history If you’re into fountain pens even a little bit you’ll probably already know about TWSBI.  If you don’t, the name may prove a little baffling, but the internet is full of exciting tales about how it means the hall of the seventh wonder of the world written upside-down by bees, or some such.  But let’s not worry about that here.  The main thing is that it’s a very enterprising Taiwanese company who really put the time in to listen to their customers and use the input to develop their new models, and this Eco is, as the name would suggest, the most affordable yet.ECO with Marine 3

How it looks  Like a prop from Stanley Kubrick’s 2001, which is to say modern but groovy, in a subtle sort of way.  There’s no attempt at cheap bling, and whether you go for black or white caps, the barrel is clear, so you get to admire the main feature; that big barrel full of ink.

ECO full length

How it feels  Picking this up is quite a pleasure.  It’s full-length and well-balanced without needing to post the cap.  The finger-guide is effective without the sharp corners of the Lamy Vista, for instance.  The Eco feels solid and well-engineered.

ECO in use

How it fills  It’s a piston-filler!  That not only means that there’s a huge amount of ink in there – enough to get you through the average working week, we reckon – but it also marks this out as a manufacturing marvel.  Leaving aside some fun-but-fragile Indian budget pens, no-one has been able to produce a proper CNC-cut piston mechanism at anything like this price before (the cheapest Pelikan or Pilot pistons will set you back at least three times as much), and the Eco earns serious credit for this achievement alone.  There’s no removable section, but it’s still possible to clean thoroughly between fills as the feed and nib are friction-fit and the piston mechanism can be removed and replaced with the special tool provided with the pen (the box also includes a handy phial of silicone grease).

Crucially, how it writes…  Well enough at the price.  TWSBI has always used German nibs, switching from Bock to JoWo a couple of years ago, and while debate rages on incessantly about which is best, either makes perfectly good steel nibs to get started with.  The nib is a little smaller than on the 530/540/580, but they had to economise somewhere, and the surface area in contact with the paper to put the ink down is just the same, of course.  There isn’t much spring in the nib, and there can be some ‘feedback’ from the paper, but it’s not scratchy.  Many people do like that feel a lot – and you’re not going to find it difficult to run out of ink while you’re at it…

ECO writing sample

Pen! What is it good for?  We think this is just right for someone just getting in to fountain pens who wants to know what the fuss made of piston-fillers is all about, and probably a good choice for students too (albeit with the caveat that this is one to clip into a pocket rather than fling around in a pencil case, if leaks are to be avoided).

VFM  Absolutely stellar; a properly-engineered large capacity piston mechanism for so little money is a very impressive achievement, and there’s nothing much about the Eco that feels cheap and tacky (with the possible exception of the rather basic clip).

ECO nib

If this isn’t quite your cup of tea, but almost…  Then take a look at some of TWSBI’s other models, many of which use the same piston-fill mechanism with slightly classier components.  The 580, for instance, uses a larger nib, has a removable/swappable section for easy maintenance and nib variation, looks like a premium pen and yet often costs only 30-40% more than the Eco.

Our overall recommendation  If you want a brand-new functional and fun piston filler at the lowest price possible, look no further.  Should you be in possession of a fair number of fountain pens already and be curious about TWSBI as a brand, however, the 580 or even the Mini may be more compelling attractions.  But you’ll end up buying one of these because it’s just so darn tempting anyway!

ECO logo

Where to get hold of one  We all got ours from Pure Pens,  and in the UK several specialist retailers including Cult Pens and The Writing Desk also stock the full TWSBI range.  Internationally, as well as other specialist pen shops, you can also buy direct from TWSBI in Taiwan (but watch out for postage and customs charges).

This meta-review references:

Thanks to Pure Pens for providing the pens we reviewed, and for putting up a nice discount for the first week after publication.

Dex Compact fountain pen review

A little bit of history  The Pen Shop is a rare beast – a small chain of actual bricks-and-mortar writing kit specialists, with a website attached.  Based in the North East of England, they’ve been epitomising the archetypal canny Geordies recently by creating their own  brand, Dex.  There are two sizes of Dex fountain pen, the larger ‘soft’ (which describes the plastic of the body rather than denoting nib feel), and the smaller ‘compact’, the mini version that we’re reviewing here.  The Dexs, Dexa or Dexii (depending upon your etymological preference) have been around for a few months now and are attracting quite a fan-base in the fountain pen message boards, so we were very pleased when the Pen Shop sent United Inkdom its first dedicated test samples…Compact snap2

How it looks  It looks pretty good, for the money.  The clear barrel shows off the ink colour in the cartridge rather nicely, and it looks like it it’s going to be a fun thing to pick up and play with – which, actually, it is!Ruth's writing

How it feels  With the cap on, we think it should be about the right size for most people’s needs, and it posts fairly securely so it feels reasonably robust too.  It’s very light indeed – the other end of the scale from the chunk of heavy metal we reviewed last week – but that’s often good news for beginners.  The rubber section is slightly shaped to add good pen posture, which is again quite helpful for anyone getting to, err, grips with writing properly.  It feels comfortable to grab and have a go with.nib up close

How it fills  This is a straightforward whack-in-a-cartridge job, and for the likely purposes of most owners that should be ideal.  The blue it comes with is perfectly adequate, and of course there are many tempting alternatives from Diamine which we’d recommend.

Crucially, how it writes…  Considering the tiny price tag, it writes rather amazingly.  The Dex pens use a steel nib made by Bock, whose reputation for quality probably needs little introduction to most people reading this.  It’s only available in M size as yet, but we don’t blame The Pen Shop for starting there as it’s a good size to get started with.Dex writing sample4Pen! What is it good for?  This is one for the classroom, without a shadow of doubt – indeed, our test samples have been enthusiastically ‘adopted’ by pupils and teachers already (and cats, of course).  Some of our reviewers are just little envious that there wasn’t a school pen this nice to use when they were getting started too…

VFM  For a beginner’s fountain pen. this is just about the best value for money there is.  High-street stationers will sell you pens which perhaps look a little shinier on the outside for only a little more, but for £10 this has everything a budding scribbler could need; that Bock nib really is built to take some abuse and still write well, and we suspect (although for obvious reasons it has been neither confirmed nor denied) that the body is made by Diplomat.  So it’s both Geordie and German, and should be flying off the shelves as an export if there’s any justice in the world… Auf Wiedersehen, Pen.pen on paper

If this isn’t quite your cup of tea, but almost…  then other purveyors of appalling puns based upon 1980s television comedy dramas are available.  But, getting back to the Dex compact, the diminutive size might be the one thing that puts off some potential purchasers, but the larger Dex ‘soft’ model solves that quite easily.

Our overall recommendation  Buy one of these for a child who you want to see enjoying writing  – and a bigger Dex ‘soft’ for yourself!  This is brilliant value, and the Dex fountain pen deserves to be a success.  We’d really like to see a wider range of nib sizes available (and maybe an italic too), but we’re informed such developments are on their way soon…pen and cat

Where to get hold of one  Obviously, enough, from the Pen Shop.  You can drop into one of their bricks-and-mortar establishments if you wish, or order direct from their website.

This meta-review references:

Thanks to The Pen Shop for providing review samples and a handy discount for the first few weeks after the meta-review was published.  We do love a bargain…

Kaweco Brass Sport fountain pen review

A little bit of history  Kaweco go back a long way, and this design does too – to the 1930s, in fact, by way of a few company ups and downs and a rebirth via the Gutberlet family.  The Sport remains a classic, and a rightly popular one – it’s the pen that the term ‘small but perfectly formed’ could have been coined for.  Our first reviewers all have their own Sport story; Ian Hedley actually got started in fountain pens with one, Scribble Monboddo’s review of a basic plastic Sport ‘Classic’ is one of his most frequently-read posts, and Ruth Hanson has promised never to get it mixed up with the lipstick ever again… but they have all been impressed already.  So when Kaweco offered United Inkdom the chance to review the new nakedly-brass Sport, well, how could we refuse?

Brass & steel
Brass & steel

How it looks  It looks seriously handsome, and we’re unanimous about that.  The plain brass finish isn’t plain at all; it does very bouncy things to reflected light, and with regular use it will take on a well-loved sort of patina.  So few manufacturers have had the courage to use plain brass without hiding it behind paint that it also looks seriously distinctive – that shape, in that colour, with that shine, and it could only be one thing.  Frankly, we’re all smitten.

Brass & paper
Brass & paper

How it feels  In a word, heavy.  But in a good way.  Brass is not the lightest metal, and the cap, barrel and section are each lathed from solid blocks of the stuff.  As this is such a small pen, the weight is pretty much perfect; you certainly know the pen is there when you pick it up, but it isn’t tiring to write with.  In our view, it’s spot on.

Brass & more brass
Brass & more brass

How it fills  Now this is a small pen, and that involves some sacrifices.  If you want exotic filling systems, a miniaturised pocket model is probably not the place to start!  There is space only for a small international cartridge, but that’s not such a bad thing; there are many good ink-makers producing pre-filled cartridges these days, and getting any ink of your choice into one with a syringe is really not so difficult.  There is a tiny squeeze converter available too, but the ink capacity is so minuscule that we wouldn’t bother.

Brass & tin
Brass & tin

Crucially, how it writes…  Well, as always that depends upon the nib!  Kaweco nibs are interchangeable and screw-in quite easily, so there is a fair range of options to choose from.  Two of our reviewers chose the standard round steel nib, and that certainly works well enough; it’s not especially distinctive, perhaps, but for a small nib it writes quite enjoyably.  Also available, and sampled by one of our three reviewers, is a proper little gold nib – and this 14k number writes very nicely indeed, with the combination of smoothness and springiness you’d expect.  So either way, it’s a real pen, despite its proportions, and all of our reviewers found it a pleasure to use.Brass & Ancient CopperBrass & Ancient Copper

Pen! What is it good for?  We’re not sure that this is one for the boardroom, and it’s probably a bit on the expensive side for the classroom.  But popped into a jacket pocket or a handbag, it’s pretty much the perfect thing for whipping out on the spur of a moment to note down ideas while out and about – and if those ideas turn out to be long-ish ones, your writing arm won’t get too tired either.  Better still, everyone who sees it will want to ask all about it; there’s a reason we started with this review, after all…

Brass & grass
Brass & grass

VFM  While not exactly a cheap pen, the brass body itself is excellent value; it’s solid, comfortable, and the appearance will gradually change to a nicely ‘vintage’ look with extended use.  None of the three reviewers have any intention of letting this leave their collections (or indeed, their persons, it seems!).  So the Brass Sport looks like great value for money at its standard retail price.  The balance sheet looks a bit more questionable when the gold nib is added as, lovely as it is, at the moment it can only be obtained as an expensive add-on accessory; it’s currently on sale for £99 in the UK, which is £34 more than the pen itself costs, and that’s difficult to justify.  We have suggested that Kaweco consider how to ‘bundle’ the pen with a gold nib ready-fitted at a more attractive price – and the CEO is exploring the options to do just that.

Insta Brass
Brass & gold

If this isn’t quite your cup of tea, but almost…  Then take a look at the Lilliput, another Kaweco model which The Pen and Inkwell will be reviewing soon.

Our overall recommendation  Go ahead and get one; you won’t regret it.  That goes for any of the standard steel nibs, at least.  For the gold nibbed-version, we’d suggest holding on for just a little longer; once Kaweco and their retailers have had an opportunity to combine brass and gold as a more reasonably-priced package it will become an irresistibly attractive option.

Brass & brown
Brass & brown

Where to get hold of one  We’d advise buying from a specialist pen retailer; in the UK, Kaweco is stocked by several of the best including The Writing Desk, Cult Pens, and Andy’s Pens, all of whom know their stuff.

This meta-review references:

Thanks to  Kaweco for lending us the Sport (and subsequently helping us find a way to keep them, as we all like them so much!) – that doesn’t influence our meta-review, but we do appreciate it.