

When curiosity finally drove me to break open the packaging, I realized pretty quickly that my experience with fountain pens was about to change for the better. So I decided to let it sit, shrink-wrapped on my desk, for about a month. For the previous installments, click here.Ĭhalk it up to a bad experience, but I really had no desire to pick up a new fountain pen after putting down my Lamy Safari a few months ago. I’d already purchased a pen – a TWSBI Eco – but I couldn’t bring myself to ink it up.
SARASA ZEBRA PEN 0.5 REFILL SERIES
This is the fifth part in a series in which I’m learning to use fountain pens.

That makes me wonder: will we see more Japanese pens enter the U.S.

If this sounds like a silly complaint, then definitely get yourself a Sarasa Grand. Similarly, if you ever click your pen upside-down on a desk, it’s not possible here – the clip blocks you. Generally I really like the Sarasa Grand, though that comes with one major caveat: the lever of the spring-hinged clip extends way too far above the barrel. It sounds like a small complaint, but this lever gets in the way whenever I try to click the pen. Additionally, there are grooves on the grip section that do a good job of increasing friction, which will help to prevent your fingers from slipping while writing.

However, the view is so limited that we’ll just have to call it a decorative window. There’s also a great accent on top of the knock (a little plastic jewel), and a window underneath the clip that is supposed to allow for a view of the refill’s ink level. The barrel comes in four colors: black, navy, pink, or (my choice) gold. Both the Sarasa Grand and the Sarsa Clip include the “Zebra JF” refill, whereas the standard Sarasa uses the “Zebra JLV” refill. The “JF” refill is darker and smoother than the “JLV” refill, so including it with the Sarasa Grand was a good choice by Zebra. But the clip isn’t the only similarity between the two pens. Perceptive readers might note that Zebra makes another version of the Sarasa with a spring-hinged clip called, obviously, the Sarasa Clip. It is bottom-heavy in particular, so it only takes a light touch to get the ink flowing.Īdditionally, the Sarasa Grand has a spring-hinged clip that allows it to clip to thicker notebooks, and doing so more securely. The barrel of the Sarasa Grand is made of brass, and, as you’d expect, it’s a hefty pen. It seems that when a gel pen reaches a certain threshold of populairty, it inevitably gets a metallic upgrade: Pentel created an “alloy” version of their Energel, Pilot turned their blockbuster G-2 into the G-2 Limited, and now Zebra has made a “Grand” version of their Sarasa.
