This pen was garbage...., January 20, 2011
This pen was garbage. Usually, I am a bit more reserved with my adjectives,
however, seeing as that's where this pen eventually ended up-- after a week of
trying to make it write--it is quite fitting. I bought this pen with the Ohto
blue-black ink cartridges and was never able to write a full letter, forget even
a word!
I have subsequently bought at Lamy Safari with an extra fine nib and couldn't be
happier.
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You cant replace the..., January 17, 2010
You cant replace the tip if it breaks and if it does you have to buy a new one
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Regarding this pen and..., December 14, 2009
Regarding this pen and considering some reviews on it, I can say that I am
(together with a few?) a happy owner. Being a compulsive buyer, I bought 3 at
once, fearing I could let one fall onto the floor and thus I would have another
handy. And I was right.
It has a sleek, modern design, without all those burlesque, expensive (and
sometimes to me, annoying) make-up that many expensive pens do have and I really
enjoyed this pen. The only cons I can see is the size, and it´s not a matter of
hand size but rather, taste. If this pen were slightly shorter, I could rate it
#5.
Putting the size aside, this pen is very good for daily use. I had no bad
experience with the nib, it writes good, does not scratches neither drag.
Unfortunately, some buddies did not like it. Well, I can say that the quality of
the writing does not depend upon the nib only, but the paper and the ink do play
a (an important) role.
I am using Trident´s Universal Black ink, which leaves a uniform trace, it does
not fade into any gray tonality. And please remember that different types of ink
*do* influence the quality of your writing of the *same* pen. When I write on
plain paper (the majority being porous), it writes averagely (and towards a good
writing), but on glossy paper, it´s like butter.
I had no problem with any of the mechanical parts of this pen so far (I´ve had
bought it some 3 months ago and use it on a daily basis) and taking into account
the size, nib, material, weight, I can say that, at least to me, this pen is
very good for a day-to-day usage, and just like many other pen, it favors a
cursive writing flawlessly (at least in my experience). As an overall and final
comment, I can say I am satisfied, do not regret my purchase.
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The OTHO Fine is very..., November 10, 2009
The OTHO Fine is very stylish and sleek.... looks like it's going 310 knots just
laying on the desk!!
The pen really lays down ink however when writing. If you use a course grade of
paper, like most recycled papers are, it bleeds.
I also have the Pilot Petit1, and it rights nicely. If you're looking for a pen
in the same category of size and material.... check out Lamy pens. Cannot go
wrong with German engineering.
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I agree with the Petit1..., March 26, 2009
I agree with the Petit1 preference - if the OHTO fine could write as well as the
petit1 does while keeping its stylish looks, it would be among my favorites.
My experience with the OHTO fine is that the ink is a watery black, almost gray,
and the pen skips and drags, even though the nib is nowhere near as fine as that
of the petit1. It was my first online fountain pen purchase - I wanted something
a little lighter than my Lamy Studio which is a bit heavy for me to use every
day - but this pen isn't it.
I love the petit1s except that they're a tiny bit too short to write comfortably
with; the top of the cap pushes into the webbing between my thumb and
forefinger. If pilot made a sligtly-less-petit1, I'd be all over it.
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