Nock Co. Mega Review: All The Cases, Part II

Part two of the Nock Co. "All the Cases" review:  the Lookout, the Sassafras, and the Maryapple. 

The Lookout

The Lookout is your basic three-pen holster.  I chose the Midnight/Foliage color scheme.  Like the other Nock Co. products, it's a great looking case, and it has enough padding to give comfort that your pens are being protected.  It fits all pens well.  Pictured are an Omas 360, Ti Pen, and a Sheaffer Legacy Heritage.  If I had to recommend one pen case to someone who needed basic pen storage for high quality pens, I would recommend this case.  It provides the same--if not better--protection than my more expensive leather cases, at a fraction of the price.

The Sassafras

The Sassafras is the "all pen" bifold case (as opposed to the Maryapple, the "all notebook" bifold, and the Hightower, the "pens + notebook" bifold).  This is another great storage option, and once again, I chose the Midnight Blue/Foliage combination.  The case holds three pens on the left in slots that are intended for one pen each (although with certain slender pens, you may be able to fit in two).  On the right, the slots are bigger, presumably intended to hold multiple cheaper pens that you don't mind bumping into one another.  I've been using the Sassafras to store my Karas Kustoms pens (Retrakt, Bolt and Render K), my Kuru Toga, and any inked up fountain pens that I'm not actually carrying with me at the time.  If I were taking an extended trip, and wanted to carry three nice pens, plus some pencils and markers, the Sassafras would be my chosen companion.  This case will get some heavy use this summer and fall, as I've got some good "writing trips" lined up. 

The Maryapple

I'm carrying this case right now in combination with the Brasstown, and I've got it loaded with two notebooks and my Exacompta index cards.  It makes sense at the moment because I am at the point where I'm close enough to filling up a Field Notes that I need to carry a spare with me.  Otherwise, however, I'm not sure that the Maryapple is the most practical case for my daily carry, especially since I have the Hightower, which holds pens and writing material together.  I absolutely love this color scheme, though. 

I have nothing remotely negative to say about any of these three cases.  The construction is superb, they fit a wide variety of different needs, and I will likely turn to all of them at one time or another.  Well done Nock Co.!  Keep it coming!  

Nock Co Three Part Mega Review: All the Cases, Part I

Hat's off to Brad and Jeffrey for completing their epic Kickstarter journey and launching Nock Co, which I sincerely hope will be supplying all of us with storage (and more) for our endlessly expanding pen accumulations/collections/addictions.  I was one of those who took the plunge on the "All the Cases" option (which, for $75, was a total steal), and received mine in early March.  I've spent some time with each of the cases and will review them in turn, starting with the the most basic (the Chimneytops), then moving on to the Maryapple, the Lookout, and the Sassafras, and finally, the Hightower and the Brasstown. 

Each one of these cases is marked with the extremely well-designed and well-made Nock Co. Tag. 

First Up, the Chimneytops

I might as well start with the "entry level" cases, the Chimneytops.  There's nothing fancy about these:  just well-designed canvas zip-cases designed to hold most standard-sized pens.  They can also hold a variet of other things, such as ink cartridges, erasers, mechanical pencil lead refills, etc.  I use the small Chimneytop to carry a handful of "disposable" pens (i.e., gel pens, ballpoints, rollerballs, marker pens) that I always have on me, and use the larger Chimneytop to store ink cartridges and mechanical pencil lead.    

Small Chimneytop in Midnight, on the left; Large Chimneytop in Steel, on the right.  A wide variety of pens fit into these cases.  Pictured are the Sakura Pigma Micron, Pilot Juice, Signo DX, Signo 207, and Sharpie.

The Good

These are nearly perfect, general purpose pen cases.  I say "nearly perfect," because I have one small quibble, below, but the construction on these is flawless, and I suspect these will meet the needs of 95% of the pen addict population.  The heavy duty Nylon exterior is certainly durable enough to survive being toted around in my messenger bag on a daily basis for the past three months, which I imagine is fairly typical of the use these will receive from most people.  I love the colors, which are pretty accurately depicted in the photos in this review.

The Bad

Not so much "the bad," because I don't know how much this point affects the majority of people who bought these cases, but I wish these would have been made the slightest bit longer so as to accommodate woodcase pencils.  True, well-used woodcase pencils that have been shortened significantly will fit in the Chimneytops.  This takes at least a few sharpenings, though.

This may be a me-specific problem, but newly sharpened wood pencils, like the Draplin Design pencil on the left, and the General's Semi-Hex and Palomino on the right, won't fit into the Chimneytops.  I've had some luck angling them into the larger case, but you run the risk of breaking your point because the fit is pretty snug. 

Again, this is but a mere quibble, since most people did/will purchase these cases to store pens and mechanical pencils, not woodcase pencils, but it would have been a nice option to have.  Perhaps in the future?  Overall, I'm impressed with the quality of construction, the colors, and the sheer versatility of the Chimneytops.  Next up later this week:  the Maryapple, the Lookout, and the Sassafras.

Pen Review: Pilot Razor Point II (Ultra Fine Tip)

Until recently, felt-tipped or porous-tipped marker pens (often simply called "fineliners") were never something I had considered using on a day-to-day basis.  It wasn't until I had read the Pen Addict's reviews of the Sakura Pigma Micron--a pen I had never tried--that I picked up some marker pens on a business trip to New York City at the inimitable DaVinci Artist Supply.  This first lot included a Micron in a .3mm tip (the "02" model), a Copic Multiliner in a .35mm tip, and a pack of the "Fine" Sharpie pens.  I use all of these pens, and plan to post a thorough review of each of them in due time, but neither of these initial purchases really did it for me in terms of an everyday writer.  They work great for jotting notes and doodling--and the Micron is the Field Notes Pen if you want dark black ink and absolutely no bleed through--but the Micron's tip felt a little fragile for heavy use, and I found the inks in the Copic and the Sharpies not quite dark and wet enough for my preference. 

Enter Pilot.  I'm a longtime user of Pilot pens, and as I mentioned in an earlier post, the Pilot Precise Liquid Ink Pen was the first pen I ever purchased by the box, way back when I was in school.  Pilot has excellent dark black ink, even in its disposable pens.  (If, like me, you can handle a bit of bleedthrough on super-cheap papers, a black Pilot pen might meet all of your black-ink needs.)  On a whim, I picked up a four-pack of Pilot V Razor "Extra Fine" Marker Pens.  Too broad.  They wrote that great dark black line, but the width didn't allow me to do the type of tiny note-taking and annotation that I need to do at work.  So I went online to see if Pilot made an even finer version of the pen, and I found these, at 10.99 for a dozen, on Amazon.

At 10.99/dz, you certainly can't beat the price.

After using this pen nearly exclusively for a week, I can safely say that this is a great fineliner.  There has been no breakdown in the tip, from what I can tell, and the inkflow has remained consistent.  That said, there is some (I would say minimal) bleedthrough with the ink.  This is a true fineliner, intended for writing, so the ink is not super-precise and well-behaved like you would find in a technical drawing pen such as the Pigma Micron or the Copic Multiliner.  What you lose in ink properties you gain in durability, and any issues with the ink still has not stopped me from using this pen on both sides of the page in a Field Notes notebook.  I would say the bleedthrough is less than you would experience with any sort of fountain pen or rollerball.    

This is the tip after two-weeks of heavy use.  Minimal, if any, breakdown, and the pen is still going strong.  I suspect that if I had used fineliners prior to using fountain pens, tip durability might be an issue, but for fountain pen users who are accustomed to writing with less pressure, durability is less of a concern.

If you are looking for a purchase that will run you approximately $.92 / pen, IMHO the Razor Point II can't be beat.  You can find a Micron in the $2-3 range (for a single pen), but to me, who is more or less a cheapskate, that still stings a bit if/when you lose it, or when the tip breaks down when the pen is only half empty.  I'm pretty sure I've already misplaced one of the Pilot V Razors (if it didn't "walk" of my desk at work when I was out of town last week), and even that is eating at me.  Don't laugh, I know I have problems.  

      

Ink Review: Sailor Jentle Apricot

Over the past two weeks I've had two pens inked up with Sailor Jentle Inks.  My Lamy 2000 (EF Nib) has been loaded up with Epinard, and my Sheaffer Legacy Heritage (one of my personal favorite pens) has been loaded up with Apricot. 

A great combination for annotating documents:  Sheaffer Legacy Heritage with Mike Masuyama-tuned EF Nib, loaded with Sailor Jentle Apricot Ink.

Orange ink is new to me.  I definitely have a think for reds in all shades, particularly darker wine-colored reds like Montblanc Hitchcock (my favorite red ink of all time), Visconti Burgundy, and Franklin-Christoph Syrah Syrah.  I decided to try orange fountain pen ink after discovering the Pilot Hi-Tec-C gel pens, which have outstanding shades of both orange and apricot, and realizing that I like to be able to distinguish between different types/categories of annotations, especially when I'm editing a lengthy document such as a 100+ page legal brief.  But I digress....

This scan makes the ink color appear slightly more red than it is in real life.  The pictures I've taken and posted below in the gallery or truer reproductions of the actual color. 

Apricot is extremely well behaved and low-maintenance for such a bold-colored ink.  It doesn't feather much, even on the cheapest paper, and bleedthrough is minimal.  So far, I've not had any difficulty cleaning the ink out of any of my pens.  One thing that distinguishes this ink from other popular orange inks such as Noodler's Apache Sunset, and even Iroshizuku Yu-Yake, is the relative lack of shading.  Some shading is there, especially in a wetter nib, but if its highly visible shading you're looking for, Apache Sunset wins that battle hands down. 

Travel Edition: The Gentleman Hits the Road

Just a quick post for the beginning of the week, since I've been traveling since Thursday (and, at least for the time being, am stranded in the airport.  What pens/stationery/writing equipment do you all take on the road?  For this particular trip, I've chosen my "non-fountain pens of choice."  If I'm going on a particularly long vacation or business trip, where I might be doing a lot of journaling or writing, I will take one or two fountain pens, but since this was a long weekend where not much writing was going to get done, I went with convenience.  

Four of my preferred "road pens"

Four of my preferred "road pens"

So, from left to right, the Sakura Pigma Micron 02 (.3mm); Hi-Tec-C Coleto Lumio in Matte Black; Retro 51 Tornado Stealth with the .7mm black refill; and the TiPen with a 0.4mm Blue-Black Hi-Tec-C refill.  The Coleto has four .4mm refills in black, purple, apricot, and orange.  I tucked these into my Nock Co. Hightower with a ruled kraft paper Field Notes and four or five Exacompta index cards and I was ready for pretty much anything:  

So far, I think the Hightower has been the favorite of my Nock Co. cases.  I received all of them, but this is my favorite so far.  Reviews forthcoming.

I'm comfortable with this as my "travel rig" for now.  I've been experimenting with various setups on recent business trips and nearly always have come home concluding that I've carried too much stuff that never gets used and just bulks up my bag.  We'll see where this goes. . . .