How to: Make Ink Ring Swatches

After my Ask The Desk post about sheening inks, I’ve had many questions about how to make ink ring swatches. I first saw these in a lot of the swatches from Asian pen enthusiasts and I wracked my brain trying to figure out how they did it. I made a mess of many pages of my notebooks while I worked it out. It’s actually really easy to do.

Making ink ring swatches

Most ink bottles develop a bit of ink on the lip of the bottle once they’ve been opened. By pressing this ring of ink on paper, you can get a quick sample of the color without having a cotton swab or paint brush handy. This can be done on a Col-o-ring or Col-o-dex card or right into your notebook.

Making ink ring swatches

For this demo, I used my Col-o-ring OVERSIZE and pressed it down on the top of a bottle of Sailor Jentle Yamadori.

Making ink ring swatches

The ring looked like this. Then with a dip pen or another pen, I can add the name and color of the ink to inventory it.

Making ink ring swatches

In this case, I used a vintage Mabie Todd dip pen. Voila!

In a notebook, the same page can be used to swatch several inks in an interesting layout.

Making ink ring swatches

Here is another bottle. This time, a small Monteverde California Teal bottle. Can you see the ink on the lip of the bottle?

Making ink ring swatches

I flipped the paper and tapped it on to the bottle. If you are trying this for the first time, it may be easier to do with a Col-o-ring card or some index cards since it will be easier to aim and get your process down before trying it with a 300+ page Tomoe River notebook.

Making ink ring swatches

So, here’s the results of my page with two inks sampled. Let’s keep going.

Making ink ring swatches

The next bottle is Pen BBS No. 224. There’s some ink around the lip. If, for some reason, you have a bottle without any ink around the lip. Put the lid back on and screw it down, then unscrew it a half turn and turn it upside down. I recommend doing it over your sink, just in case it leaks at all. Then turn it right side and unscrew it and see if there’s some ink on the lip. If not, try the half turn/upside down trick again.

Making ink ring swatches

With two rings on my page already, I needed to look carefully to aim my ring artistically.

Making ink ring swatches

It turned out okay.

Making ink ring swatches

The only true challenge is sample vials. Ink does not accumulate on the lip of plastic, sample vials like it does on glass vials.

Making ink ring swatches

The only way to get a good amount of ink on to the paper is to tip the vial on to the paper which can be messy if the vial is not in contact with the paper entirely and leaks. So…. did I cover everything?

Product Release: Baron Fig Simple Observations Notebook

Product Release: Baron Fig Simple Observations Notebook

Baron Fig collaborated with Shantell Martin to create the new Simple Observations ($20) guided journal. Utilizing their classic flagship Confidant size (5.4″ x 7.7″), the journal features a black cloth cover with white lettering on the cover. Inside the end paper reverse the colors with bright white paper and black hand lettering.

Baron Fig Simple Observations

Baron Fig Simple Observations

Inside, the journal features 375 prompts (192 pages), two on each page to write or draw your impressions. In our current world, it is the perfect time to reflect on some of our thoughts, simple pleasures, and inner dreams.

Baron Fig Simple Observations

Examples of some of the prompts include:

  • Write the longest word you can think of.
  • How do you spend your days off?
  • Open a drawer and draw what’s inside.
  • What is privacy?
  • What does water taste like to you?

You can open the book and write or draw the first prompt that speaks to you. Then tomorrow, open the book to another page. No one says you have to start at the front of the book and work from front-to-back. Do whatever you want. Journaling doesn’t have to be epic or intimidating. It can be short, silly, fun, bite-sized, simple or as complicated as you want it to be.

Baron Fig Simple Observations

We have reviewed the paper used in BaronFig notebooks and journals in the past and find the paper to be good for pen, pencil, ink and fountain pen.

Baron Fig Simple Observations

The notebook comes in the same matte finish box that all the other Baron Fig Confidant notebooks ship in making them supremely giftable.

The timing for this product couldn’t be more perfect. I’m sure when BaronFig planned it, they couldn’t have predicted that so many of us would be housebound, stressed out and possibly unemployed and needing a way to think about the things that made us thankful and happy. Now, to open up the page in Simple Observations that says “What’s the purpose of life?” and write “to pick 4-leaf clovers, drink cheap beer and make waffles.” Sounds good to me.

DISCLAIMER: The items included in this review were provided free of charge by BaronFig for the purpose of review. Please see the About page for more details.

Link Love: Squirrel Brain

Link Love: Squirrel Brain

I have squirrel brain today so bear with me.

Pelikan Hub 2020 canceled

First, news that the Pelikan Hubs are officially cancelled for 2020 rolled out yesterday. It’s the safest decision but it makes all of us so sad. Just this weekend, Laura and I were talking about how, in order to orchestrate the Hubs, Pelikan would have to have staff in their warehouse right now boxing up magazines, ink and all the accoutrements now to get materials shipped around the world in time for the September event — and that’s assuming that there isn’t a terrible increase in the cases of COVID-19 in the interim.

Yesterday, Lisa from Vanness Pens asked me to appear on her weekly Instagram Live chat. We had a good turn out of people. If you’d like to watch it, we chat about what we are currently using, the possibility of pen shows this year and shipping issues.

Last week on The Pen Addict podcast, Brad said that he would unveil the urushi Lamy Safari/AL-Star pens that Jonathan at Carolina Pen Co. created for us in a YouTube video. He posted it this morning. There should be a link on Relay.FM if you’d like to see it for yourself. Jonathan outdid himself. I’m speechless.

Now that Memorial Day has come and gone… did you notice it? It is now safe to pull out your “summer whites” sweatpants and replace your slippers with your flip flops. Thank you, post-pandemic, social-distanced, fashion rules. At least we don’t have rules for what notebooks, pens and ink we can use, right?

Finally, next week is the start of our (hold on to your hats…. CAPS LOCK ON!) OUR TEN YEAR ANNIVERSARY!!! That’s right, The Well-Appointed Desk is turning TEN! I can hardly contain my excitement and we have WEEKS of extra special content planned including TONS of giveaways so get ready for it!! Are you excited? Humor me, okay.

Pens:

Ink:

Pencils:

Notebooks & Paper:

Art & Creativity:

Other Interesting Things:

 

 

Notebook and Pen Review: Rocket Book Everlast Mini

Review by Laura Cameron

I was tickled this year when my mother-in-law tucked a Rocket Book Everlast Mini, an erasable notebook, into my birthday package. I’ve found information about the Everlast Mini from the closed Indiegogo campaign from 2018, and it appears they are purchasable through Amazon ($16.00).

The Everlast Mini is a mini notebook measuring 3.5″ x 5.5″ and includes 48 pages of a polyester blend that feels close to regular paper and has a light grey dot grid. The special feature of this notebook is that the pages are erasable and thus reusable! The kit I got included a black Pilot FriXion ballpoint pen, but the packaging stated that any pens from the Pilot FriXion line would work so we picked up a FriXion 8-pack of 0.6 Fine Liners ($16.15) to test them as well.

I admit I was skeptical. I wondered if the pens would erase cleaning, but they did! They packaging notes that you should write on the pages as normal, and then allow approximately 10-15 seconds for the ink to dry and bond to the synthetic page. Wiping my finger across the writing after that didn’t smear at all.

To erase both the ball point and the fine liners, I simply wet the microcloth included in the package and wiped the page clean. The page did require two passes to be clear of color (the first easily removed the writing, the second removed any bit of color residue left behind). I don’t know how the pages will fare over time if heavily used, or if the ink remains on the page for days (weeks? years?), but they appear to work as advertised.

One other benefit of this notebook is that the pages all have QR codes and can be scanned easily into the app or platform of your choice for easy storage. I’ll be honest – I still haven’t embraced scanning my notes into electronica, but I do appreciate that they suggest you use any number of popular apps (Google Drive, Dropbox, One Note, OneDrive, etc.) rather than developing their own.

Overall this was a fun birthday treat and I suspect this notebook may end up living in my purse for brainstorming and on-the-go notes!

DISCLAIMER: Some of the items included in this review were provided to us free of charge for the purpose of review. Please see the About page for more details.

Giveaway Winners: Faber-Castell Grip Fountain Pens

Giveaway Winners: Faber-Castell Grip Fountain Pens

Thanks to everyone who read our review for the Faber-Castell Grip in the new Pearl Mint Green, Turquoise and Rose colors and thanks for entering the giveaway sponsored by Goldspot Pens.

There were many requests for a series of fall inspired colors like bright yellow, orange and deep purple so Faber-Castell, if you’re listening, we have your focus group right here. The people have spoken! There were also many requests for dark graphite, a variety of jewel tones, and if I may suggest it, maybe an actual aluminum barrel version?

Now, on to our winners:

Delightfully, all the winners selected by the random number generator chose different colors so I guess we won’t have to play rock, paper, scissors after all.

Thanks to everyone and stay tuned… we have a big announcement coming up.

Memorial Day

Memorial Day

Today is Memorial Day in the US. It is the day we honor those who served our country and lost their lives in doing so. This year, many are also honoring those who have lost their lives due to the pandemic sweeping the world. The death toll, as a result of COVID-19, has surpassed 100,000 in the US and that’s just a fraction of the number of people who have been impacted by the illness both here and around the world. We are taking today, here at The Desk, to recognize the toll that any loss takes on humanity. If you choose to mark this day honoring ancestors who fought in conflicts or those who may have struggled against an illness, whether it was recent or in years past, know that we, too, are remembering those who have past as well. This is our moment of silence…