Posted in Fountain Pens

New Pen Day (Pelikan M205 Rose Quartz)

Just after Pelikan Hub 2025 I started looking at Pelikan pens. At the time, I mistakenly thought I didn’t have one in my collection and of course part of the point of the Pelikan Hubs is influence you just enough to possibly purchase a Pelikan. We were regaled with the newest releases, including an M200 model that matched the Pelikan Edelstein color of 2025 – Apricot Achat.

Of all the Pelikan model M lines, the 200/205* line currently fits in the upper limits of what I am comfortable spending budget wise, especially for a steel nib. My first gold nib pen was roughly the same cost, so a steel nib pen has to really call to me and the new M200 model did not.

National Fountain Pen Day rolled around. As expected, there were a lot of sales going on at the various pen shops both brick and mortar and online. I window-shopped as I often do. Not actually putting things in carts, because those “did you forget something?” emails are creepy. One of my favorite sites to window-shop is Atlas Stationers. Even when there isn’t an event sale they have “door-buster” deals that are fun to go through. So, it wasn’t a surprise to find the M205 model in Rose Quartz (the 2023 Edelstein color) listed as a door-buster. What was surprising was the price. It was under $100. There were two nib sizes available when I first saw the listing – medium and broad – by the time I actually ordered the pen the next day only the broad nib was left, and I was fine with that. There’s a lot you can do with a broad nib if it doesn’t write the way you want.

A Pelikan M205 in the color Rose Quartz with a steel broad nib rests on  a ceramic flower pen rest that is also shaded pink.   Just above on the  left hand side you can also see the cap of the pen that has a white finial and silver banding.
A close-up of the Pelikan M205 nib. Photo taken with iPhone 14 Pro. No filters.

Ironically, I waited several more weeks after the pen arrived to ink it up because I decided it needed to be inked with the companion ink Edelstein Rose Quartz which I did not own. I’m positive that I can link this decision to the product write-up on Atlas for the pen itself. It included a reference to the ink color in a rather striking manner (unfortunately I can’t quote it because the product page no longer exists) and the imagery stuck in my brain weeks later so kudos to the copy writer because I am not a person that has to be matchy when pairing a pen and ink.

The M205 is piston filler (thus the need for bottled ink) and while I might not be able to see the exact color of ink sloshing around the chamber because of the pink color of the barrel it’s still satisfying to watch.

a capped Pelikan m205 rests on a flower pen rest. Underneath them both is an A5 Claire Fontaine notebook. The page is filled with writing in the ink color Rose Quartz.
A page in my common place book featuring the writing with the Pelikan m205 with a broad nib and Edelstein Rose Quartz ink. Taken with an 1phone 14 Pro.

The picture above doesn’t show the ink properly; the overhead lighting gave the white paper of the Claire Fontaine notebook a cream-color cast and made the ink look brownish. So, it’s not the best representation color-wise but I like the picture regardless. It still shows the shading you get from writing with a broad nib.

I originally drafted this blog post on Rhodia dot paper with the Pelikan M205. I felt only the tiniest amount of feedback writing on the Rhodia paper compared to writing in the Claire Fontaine notebook. Then pen is currently one of 5 pens I’ve inked up for use in January. I like a smooth writing experience and the M205 doesn’t disappoint. And yes, pairing the namesake ink with the pen works well. Which is a good thing because it’s likely the only ink it will ever be inked with now that I have a bottle of it to go through.

Good thing I like the color pink.

-C

*The model numbers only denote the color of the trim – gold or silver – other than that they are exactly the same.

Posted in Ink

Fountain Pen Companion

I have this habit. Once I find out that you like something that I like, and you might not have some aspect of it…say for example I find out that you like fountain pens and ink and there is a particular color of ink that you haven’t had the opportunity to try out. I will immediately offer to share if I own it.

But Charlie! Why? You might ask. Well for one I get to spend time geeking out about something that I truly enjoy, and I am never ever (ever) going to use up all the ink I own by myself. Why not give some of it to someone else to try and test out? Of course, it’s easy to sit next to someone and go through a physical swatch book. (Every pen enthusiast has one or two, right?) Not so easy when you live in different states.

This is where the Fountain Pen Companion (site link) comes to the rescue. This is a fabulous site where you can catalog all of your inks and then share that with others.

This site is meant to allow you to track your ink collection and to simplify sharing this data with others. It also aims to help you trade ink samples with other users.

– Urban Hafner, creator of FPC.

See where I am going with this? Here’s my list. You are more than welcome to take a look if interested. Let’s talk about ink.

-Charlie

Clicking the button below will take you to my ink list on Fountain Pen Companion.