LAMY Cursive Fountain Pen Nib
LAMY Cursive Fountain Pen Nib
This special steel nib is designed for writing Chinese and Japanese cursive. The horizontal strokes are slightly wider than the vertical strokes, similar to an architect nib. The line width is similar to a fine or extra fine. This nib fits most modern LAMY pens except for the LAMY 2000.
Made in Germany by LAMY.
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fantastic👍👍
Wonderful ✒ rendering satisfying pen stroke in 'Kanji' writing. MUST-HAVE for expansive use of LAMY's assortment of swap-in Quality ✒ Nibs.
Very happy with the service from the shop! The nib itself, well I'm happy I could try it out. It seems scratchier than the default Lamy nib I had, with greater control of ink flow (so an ink which shows that might be especially good). I've been using it for Chinese calligraphy, which is what it's for, but other than the company saying they spent a lot of time on it, they don't say much about why it's different, and I can't guess. I don't seem to be able to get much line-width variation at all, which I would have assumed to be important. So, I'm left a bit perplexed about what is good at. But very happy it was in stock to try out!
I got this nib to see if I'd be interested in having a nibmeister grind one of my pens into an architect nib. It was very scratchy at first, but just a few passes on the micromesh made it much smoother. I've enjoyed printing with it. Thanks for making it available.
fantastic👍👍
Wonderful ✒ rendering satisfying pen stroke in 'Kanji' writing. MUST-HAVE for expansive use of LAMY's assortment of swap-in Quality ✒ Nibs.
Very happy with the service from the shop! The nib itself, well I'm happy I could try it out. It seems scratchier than the default Lamy nib I had, with greater control of ink flow (so an ink which shows that might be especially good). I've been using it for Chinese calligraphy, which is what it's for, but other than the company saying they spent a lot of time on it, they don't say much about why it's different, and I can't guess. I don't seem to be able to get much line-width variation at all, which I would have assumed to be important. So, I'm left a bit perplexed about what is good at. But very happy it was in stock to try out!
I got this nib to see if I'd be interested in having a nibmeister grind one of my pens into an architect nib. It was very scratchy at first, but just a few passes on the micromesh made it much smoother. I've enjoyed printing with it. Thanks for making it available.