Friday, June 30, 2006

Lamy Safari


A few days ago I got my second Lamy Safari fountain pen. I bought the first one in January, and I´ve been using it every day since then (no, I´m not kidding), so I thought I´d say a few words here about this favourite drawing tool of mine.

The first of my two Lamys is an Extra Fine nib, and I use it together with Noodler´s black ink. I want to be able to use watercolors on my drawings, and I had to look for quite a while before finding an ink that is waterproof but still doesn´t ruin fountain pens. Noodler´s is the only one I´ve found so far, and it is great to work with. Jet black, nice flow and ok price. (A bottle isn´t exactly cheap, but it lasts a long time.)

The Lamy Safari is incredibly nice to draw with. It makes a smooth even line and for a fountain pen, it´s got a fairly flexible nib. Harder pressure gives a thicker line. Although I don´t recommend not caring for your pens, I have never cleaned it so far. I just keep filling it up with ink when it starts to run out, and keep using it. It has never skipped a line and the ink has never dried in it, it just seems to go on and on.

As I like to draw with a thin line, the Extra Fine was my first choice. In my pen case I usually have another ink pen too with a little broader nib to fill in black surfaces and emphasizing certain lines in my drawings. When the last one of those non-fountain pens dried up I decided to replace it with another Lamy, only this time with a Medium nib (and a happy yellow barrel). If it turns out Medium doesn´t do the trick I´ll just get the Broad nib to replace the Medium with. That´s a very practical detail with the Safaris – you can change the nib if you feel like it. Just pull it straight out and replace it with another. Hardly anything you´d choose to do very often, since black ink is kind of… well, black and all over (and waterproof in this case), but the possibility of changing nibs is good. And economical – you don´t have to get a whole new pen if you´re not satisfied.

I´m very pleased with the Safari (you didn´t get that until now, right?). It´s the most expensive pen I´ve bought so far, but it´s been worth every cent (or öre, as we say in Sweden). I can really recommend to try one out if you are an ink pen kind of person.

9 comments:

Teri said...

You've got me convinced! I was going to place an order anyway so will include this. I love the extra fine also. Thanks.

Nel Jansen said...

Thanks, Nina, for the information. I've been hearing about them, but nobody until you has explained exactly what they are and their experience using these. I'm convinced, it's going on my "wish list". Yeah, I agree, nothing like a great extra fine line.

Anonymous said...

Thanks,Nina, I've been debating for a while and your technical info decided me to try one.I love to integrate my watercolors with ink so this should be the ticket.

starrgirl's world said...

I'm a Lamy fan, too. I alternate Noodler's Eternal Brown and Lapis Legal, rinsing the pen good in the bathroom sink before refilling. I'm amazed that this pen just up and writes every time I pick it up - sometimes days between uses. Great for drawing and just for writing!

suzanne cabrera said...

Thanks for sharing info about the Lamy. I've been searching for a better pen. Perhaps this is the one!!!

Unknown said...

Cool idea. I have Paris Waterman fountain pen (Noodlers ink too, but blue). It works for fine and medium just by flipping the pen over. Backside leaves fine, regular side leaves a medium line.
...dave

Unknown said...

These pens are very nice! Though I tend to prefer the Pilot Prera because of its finer nib. JetPens.com has them for sale. You can also see more pictures on how the Safari pens write here: http://www.fountainpennetwork.com/forum/index.php?showtopic=57811

Unknown said...

Oh strange, the link didn't show. The pictures are here:
http://www.fountainpennetwork.com
/forum/index.php?showtopic=57811

Anonymous said...

thank you.