Discernment
If you spend enough time hunched over a workbench with a 10x loupe pressed against your eye socket, you start to see the world as a series of lies told by marketing departments. In the world of vintage fountain pens-my specific corner of the asylum-the lie is the gold content of the nib.
A newcomer walks in, eyes bright with the prospect of spending four hundred dollars, and the first thing they ask is whether the nib is 14-karat or 18-karat gold. They’ve been trained to believe that more gold equals a softer, more luxurious “give” on the paper.
It’s a logical assumption. It’s also completely wrong. The “softness” of a pen is a product of the tine geometry and the thickness of the metal, not the purity of the alloy. I have handled 21-karat nibs that felt like writing with a masonry nail and steel nibs that felt like a paintbrush.
Purity figures are easy to stamp on a box, but they fail to describe the actual physics of “give” and paper feel.
But “18k” is a number you can put on a box. “Optimized Tine Geometry” is a conversation that takes twenty minutes and a lot of squinting. We are a species obsessed with the measurable because the measurable is easy to compare.
