| General > General Technical Chat |
| Pens and papers |
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| AdrianFu:
Have a Lotring set of pens 0.1- 0.7. But unfortunately I stopped drawing for awhile due to health problems and ink dried in tips. So if someone can give me a good tip on how to free up the tips would appreciate it. The kit had everything I needed when I was at uni pens mechanical pencils set squares everything and was expensive. Noodles for the next month :-- no beer :-- . Adrian |
| jfiresto:
For erasers, my all time favorite for pencil is the Läufer PLAST-0120. |
| PlainName:
--- Quote ---good tip on how to free up the tips --- End quote --- Soaking. Coupled with a little manipulation, but the 0.35s are probably toast. When I used them professionally the only way I got to keep using them reliably was to, er, use them. And clean 'em out good before they dried if I stopped using them. (Hope you're trying to get them going because your health has improved!) |
| emece67:
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| VK3DRB:
Way back when I was a high school and university, I preferred a fountain pen, especially when solving mathematical problems. It gave the maths an image of beauty like poetry. Nothing nicer than a "QED" written using a fountain pen. In those days, you could buy left hand nibs that were slightly bent the left that allowed a more comfortable writing experience for the user. To my knowledge true left hand nibs are no longer available anywhere on the planet. To this day, I am an over-writer (write with a hook) even when using a pencil or a ballpoint pen, as are many of us older left-handers. The reason is when we were learning to write, if we wrote like a right-hander (an under-writer), we would smudge the ink with our hand as we were writing. The Israelis probably had the opposite problem. https://www.nibs.com/content/left-handed-writers |
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