Pen Review: Zebra Sarasa Clip

I’ll be the first to admit, I’ve been a lazy pen blogger lately.  I’ve let my stockpile of pens and pencils “to review” accumulate to an insane degree, so I have to get on it.  I’ve been stuck in a cycle of indecision, going back and forth over what direction I want the blog to take, what kind of stuff I want to focus on, etc., but at the end of the day, this blog is more or less a reflection of my personal usage and writing habits, and I use pretty much anything I have at hand as long as it offers a decent writing experience.  

So, back to where I’ve been meaning to start since the beginning.  My office stocks Zebra Sarasas as the “supply cabinet” pen.  The Sarasa is an unusual choice, but it’s been there for years, ever since I’ve joined my current company back in 2008.  Prior to that, there was a stockpile of custom-printed Bic rollerballs with our firm logo on them (which were actually pretty decent, and I still grab them when I can find them), but at some point the choice was made to move to the retractable gel pens in .7mm tip size.  But why the Sarasa over the Pilot G2, or the Uniball Signo 207, its two primary competitors?  I’ve never been able to get an explanation for this, and I’ve been left to assume that someone who worked in human resources must have really, really liked the Sarasa (or got a really, really good deal on 2 million of them seven years ago).  

My nemesis in black. 

My nemesis in black. 

The Sarasa is the reason that my pen hobby/habit reemerged with a vengeance a few years ago.  I hate those things.  With a passion.  I’ve written about this before, when I reviewed the Pilot G2, but the .7mm Sarasa blobs and smears to a degree that makes it nearly unusable to me.  The blue is worse than the black.  The red is ok, and I like red ink, so on that rare occasion that I’m forced to grab something out of the supply cabinet, and I can’t find a pencil, I’ll grab a red Sarasa.  

The Sarasa Clip offers a completely different experience.  The name is also fitting. 

The Sarasa Clip offers a completely different experience.  The name is also fitting. 

So this general dislike of the Sarasas is the reason I’ve been reluctant to pick up another highly regarded Japanese gel pen, the Zebra Sarasa Clip, which I finally caved and purchased this past weekend during my visit to Kinokuniya in New York City.  Here are my takeaways: 

The Sarasa Clip is a completely different pen.  Build-wise, most people would consider this to be a “lower-end” pen than the standard Sarasa.  The Clip has a slightly more slender body, the knock on the pen is looser, and the grip section of the pen has less cushion.  It cost me less than $2.  BUT, the refill is much better, in my opinion.  It has none of the blobbing and smearing that I can’t stand about the general Sarasa.  Some of this is due to my personal preferences as to tip size:  the Clip comes in a .38mm tip size, which puts less ink on the page, and the less ink on the page, the less blobbing, smearing, etc.  But part of it is due to the quality of the refill itself.  I’m not a huge fan of the Pilot Juice, even in the .38mm tip size, and I like Pilot pens.  There’s something about certain refills, and their varying ink formulations, that make them more or less pleasurable to write with.  The Clip passes the test.  

The Sarasa Clip has a slightly narrower grip section than the standard Sarasa. 

The Sarasa Clip has a slightly narrower grip section than the standard Sarasa. 

Another size comparison.  That clip is friggin' huge.  And it's also spring loaded, meaning that it will actually stay put. 

Another size comparison.  That clip is friggin' huge.  And it's also spring loaded, meaning that it will actually stay put. 

The one issue some may have with the Sarasa Clip is, well, the clip.  It’s huge, and has a massive logo on it, which is written in Japanese characters that I have zero ability to translate.  It’s not something that would stop me from using the pen, but I can see how it might look disproportionate to the size of the pen.  It is spring-loaded, however, unlike its brethren, so the clip will stay put.  

EDIT:  I've added a comparison of writing samples from various blue-black and blue gel pens and hybrid gel/ballpoints.  

EDIT:  I've added a comparison of writing samples from various blue-black and blue gel pens and hybrid gel/ballpoints.  

The Clip is available in a huge range of colors.  You can purchase them from Jetpens (link here), as well as at Kinokuniya if you are in New York, San Francisco, or other cities with a Kinokuniya or Maido location.  Another bonus:  the Clip is cheap.  I think I paid $1.75 for this one, compared with $3.95 for a Hi-Tec-C.   (Jetpens sells the Clip for $2.20, last I checked, the Hi-Tec-C for $3.30, and the Signo DX for $2.50.)

Great Pen Stores: Kinokuniya Books

Whenever I find myself in New York City, one of my favorite places to visit is always Kinokuniya Books on the West Side of Bryant Park (1073 Avenue of the Americas).  Rather than try to describe to you why I love this store, I offer this: 

The Kinokuniya gel/ballpoint display.  I'm not sure there's another B&M retail store that stocks this kind of variety in the United States (with the possible exception of Maido Stationery in San Francisco, which I understand to be affiliated with Kinokuniya).  

This display is just one of their pen/pencil/stationery racks.  In this picture, across the top, from left to right, are displays of jetstreams/acroballs, Pilot Hi-Tec-Cs, Signo DXs, and Sarasa Clips.  Mixed in among them you will find Energels, Sliccis, Frixions, the entire range of Pilot Varsity disposable fountain pens, and various other gems.  

While I was in the store, they had just received a massive shipment from Japan and were in the process of restocking their inventory.  The store itself is pretty small, so I couldn't get in a position to take pictures of the pencil display (which is just as large as the pen display) featuring pretty much any kind of mechanical pencil, japanese woodcase pencil, erasers, and leads you would want to get your hands on. 

Under glass, in a display case, Kinokuniya has a more-than-respectable selection of Pilot and Sailor fountain pens, as well more expensive gel pens and multipens such as the Pilot Cavalier Hi-Tec-C and the Zebra Sharbo DX.  I have bought Sailor ink here before, and I believe they also carry Iroshizuku, but I didn't ask because I wasn't in the market for ink this trip.  (All fountain pen ink is kept behind the counter and not on display.)

Kinokuniya also devotes the entire back wall to notebooks and paper.  Again, it was a bit of a mess with employees pulling things down and rearranging the display racks, so no pictures this time, but they have notebooks from Figurare, Apica, Midori, Rhodia, Campus, and other Japanese brands I had never seen before.  If you are looking for refills for your Midori Traveller's notebook (or to pick one up), they stock the full range of refills and accessories in both sizes.  

My purchases this trip: 

I picked up a couple of unbranded pocket notebooks, a Pilot Hi-Tec-C Slim Knock, a .38mm Jetstream in blue, a .25 mm Pentel Slicci in black, and a .38mm Zebra Sarasa Clip in blue black.  

I picked up a couple of unbranded pocket notebooks, a Pilot Hi-Tec-C Slim Knock, a .38mm Jetstream in blue, a .25 mm Pentel Slicci in black, and a .38mm Zebra Sarasa Clip in blue black.  

Kinokuniya is a great pen store. They also carry both Japanese and English language books and periodicals, Japanese stationery items such as Washi tape, paper clips, and art supplies, as well as a full range of calendars and planners.  (No Hobonichi Techo, I asked.)  If you live in the NYC area, or are just passing through, I highly recommend stopping in and picking something up.  After Art Brown closed down last year, I always make it a point to support these stores and do my part to keep them around.  

Here is a link to their website, although they don't sell stationery online, to my knowledge. 

Happy Fountain Pen Day! (One day in advance)

Happy Fountain Pen Day to all you pen enthusiasts out there.  I'm on the road today, so I won't be able to post tomorrow.  This is just a reminder that the Gentleman Stationer's Fountain Pen Day giveaway ends at Midnight on Friday, November 7 (tomorrow).  I will announce a winner on Saturday, and the winner will have until Midnight, CST Monday to claim his or her prize.  Here's a link to the post in case you missed it the first time around.  The usual giveaway rules apply:  leave a comment in the giveaway post, and I will number each comment received and randomly draw a winner.  If the first winner doesn't claim the prize, I will draw another, and repeat until someone claims the pen!

So how will I be spending Fountain Pen Day?  I'm in New York City all weekend, a great place for pen, stationery and book shopping.  Granted, it's not as good as it used to be (R.I.P. Art Brown), and every day it seems that stores we used to think of as "institutions" are closing to make way for generic chains, but compared to what we have available here in the Nashville, Tennessee area, there are more than enough to keep me busy for two days. What's on my list?

  • Fountain Pen Hospital:  Unfortunately the last independent brick and mortar dedicated pen store left in NYC.  I'm going to try to make it down to FPH, but since I'm in a conference for most of the day on Friday, and they're closed on the weekend, it may not be in the cards this trip.
  • Kinokuniya Bookstore:  THE place to go in NYC (if not the entire United States) to buy your Hi-Tec-C's, Signo DXs, Sharbo's, .5mm Jetstreams and Acroballs, Sarasas, Coletos, etc.  Did I mention they stock the entire line of Midori Traveler's Notebook refills?
  • Sam Flax:  Harry Marks reminded me of this one, which I had completely forgotten about.  They have a great selection of paper and notebooks, including Quo Vadis and Rhodia.
  • Muji:  This trip will be my first in which I'm going to try to visit Muji.  They have a wide array of gel pens and paper, which I've seen reviewed favorably.

If I'm missing anything, give me a shout.  I'm always looking for new places to visit and new products to try.  

Two-For Tuesday: A Couple of Ink Reviews

Here are a couple of quick ink reviews on inks that I was using over the weekend.  The first, Kaweco Palm Green, was a pleasant surprise, although it's not really a color that I'd find myself using all that often.  Like all Kaweco Inks, it's low-maintenance, if not a bit pricy in bottle form.  The second is Iroshizuku Asa-Gao ("Morning Glory"), which I really like, though I found it too similar to more economical colors like Waterman Florida Blue in order to justify paying the premium price for Iroshizuku.  The most pleasant surprise was the pen that I used for the second review, a Noodler's Ebonite Konrad "Dixie Methuselah," courtesy of PenChalet.  A full review will be coming in the next couple weeks, but after some less-than-stellar experiences with Noodler's pens, I'm really enjoying the Konrad.  

One Week With . . . The Pilot Metropolitan

As I announced yesterday, The Gentleman Stationer is giving away a Pilot Metropolitan in honor of Fountain Pen Day, courtesy of Jetpens.  I announced the giveaway first to ensure that anyone interested had a full week to participate, even though I haven't gotten around to posting my actual review of the Pilot Metro until now.  

This is the Pilot Metropolitan that The Gentleman Stationer is giving away in honor of Fountain Pen Day.  See yesterday's post for details! 

The Pilot Metropolitan is an excellent pen and I'm not sure I can sing its praises enough.  It's not that the pen doesn't have shortcomings--it does.  The grip section has a somewhat awkward "step-down" from the barrel to the section that can cause problems for those who grip their pens high.  From an aesthetic perspective, some of the new "animal print" patterns (purple leopard print?) are a little out there.  But at the end of the day, I believe this is the single best entry level pen on the market, and one of the best workhorse "daily user" pens available.  I spent this past week using the Metropolitan (plain silver, fine point) exclusively.  Here are my thoughts.  

Entry Level Fountain Pens

I bought my first fountain pen when I was living in France in 2000-2001.  I was a university student at the Sciences-Po in Strasbourg, and the only one in all of my lectures who was writing with a rollerball (a Pilot V5, my then pen of choice).  After a week or so of watching my new classmates write elegant cursive on their Seyes-lined paper and change their ink cartridges to switch back and forth between ink colors I had never seen, I was intrigued enough to stop by the stationery store on my way back to my apartment and pick up three student-grade fountain pens and what must have been a half gallon plastic bag of generic blue-black ink cartridges.  I no longer have any of those pens, but I'm pretty sure they were a Waterman Kultur, a Sheaffer No-Nonsense, and a generic Stypen.  With the lone exception of the Kultur, these pens were horrible writers, with dry, scratchy nibs and flow issues.  The Stypen leaked and ruined at least two pairs of pants.  But I was hooked. 

I mention this story because I probably spent twice the price of a Pilot Metropolitan on those three cheaply made pens, only one of which worked *reasonably* well, and none of which I ever could have used in the professional environment I work in today.  It's possible that if the Metropolitan had been available, and I had bought that pen as a student, I would still be using the same pen today, and I certainly would have been spared five years of rotating through handfuls of cheap fountain pens looking for something that was halfway reliable and wouldn't break the bank.  I also can't help but think that if I caught the fountain pen bug using the "first pens" I had available to me, how many people might be converted if they had the opportunity to test the waters of the fountain pen world with an attractive, reliable pen like this one.

Build

This pen is a workhorse.  I have two Metropolitans in my collection:  a plain black pen with a medium nib, and a plain silver pen with a fine nib.  While the medium is probably my favorite for everyday writing, I broke out the fine this week for review purposes.

The Pilot Metropolitan is a classic-looking pen that performs well as a daily user. 

The body of the pen is predominantly plastic, but it has some heft to it, so I suspect there is a brass weight in the barrel.  The plastic is thick and not brittle, unlike some pens billed as "beginner" or "entry level" fountain pens.  It feels sturdy.  It also doesn't scratch easily.  I've tossed these things into various bags, pockets with keys, car glove boxes, etc. and they still look good as new.  The clip is nothing special: It's not spring loaded, but it's tight, and the pen definitely stays clipped to wherever you keep it stored.  Finally--my favorite part--the cap is a "click" or "slip" cap that pops on and off with a satisfying "thunk" and stays on, with no wiggle.

The converter that ships with the Metropolitan is nothing fancy, but at least you don't get stuck paying an extra $5 for the privilege of filling from the bottle (which is supposed to be economical).  

The Metropolitan is a cartridge/converter pen that ships with a converter installed.  The converter is pretty basic:  it's a low-end squeeze converter that's nothing fancy but gets the job done.  I believe it's the same one that ships with the Pilot Parallel calligraphy pens.  The pen also comes with a single cartridge of Pilot Blue or Blue-Black Ink (I can't tell by looking at it, and I haven't used it).  Like most Japanese companies, Pilot's cartridges are proprietary, so be warned that if you want to use cartridges to refill this pen you can't use the standard international model.  

Design

The Metropolitan sports a classic streamlined design.  In its most basic color scheme (i.e., those not involving animal print), it's a pen that won't turn heads at the office, for those of you (like me) who get tired of eye rolls whenever you break out something that doesn't resemble the G2 or Sarasa or Jotter or whatever other "nice pen" your coworkers are carrying.

The Nib

Translucent Pilot feed. 

The Metropolitan uses the same nib as the Prera and other midrange Pilot pens. 

Unlike many (if not most) pens at this price point, the Metropolitan sports a smooth stainless steel nib that has none of the scratch first-time fountain pen users sometimes complain about.  The nibs on the two Metros I have are actually smoother than many gold nibs I own.  They are stiff as nails--don't be expecting any flex or significant line variation--but these pens aren't intended to write Copperplate or Spencerian.  I've heard the nibs are swappable with the Prera and other mid-range Pilot pens, but I have no experience doing that and can't recommend it one way or another.

Packaging and Price Point

Considering the Metropolitan is priced at a whopping $15.00, the packaging on the Metropolitan easily exceeds its competition.  It comes in a fairly nice clamshell box enclosed in a cardboard sleeve.  Definitely more than I would expect, considering that the Pilot G2 Pro is only slightly less expensive and doesn't come in a box at all.  But moving back to the price point:  $15.00.  I'm not sure there is anything on the market that even approaches a pen of this quality for $15.00.  Some people will say that you can get a Jinhao or another Chinese pen for $5 or whatever on Ebay, and, yes, it's possible that if you take that leap of faith you might receive a pen that writes as well as a Metropolitan, but the consistency won't be there.  I've bought those very cheap pens before, and for every excellent writer there are five that won't work at all and are a complete waste of money.  (Do the math:  buy 6 pens to get one decent writer = 6 x $5.00 per pen = $30.00).  Save yourself the headache, buy the Metropolitan and you're sure to get something that writes, and writes well.

DISCLAIMER:  While the pen that I used to write this review comes from my own personal collection, JetPens is providing the Metropolitan for the Fountain Pen Day Giveaway free of charge.  If you aren't lucky in the giveaway, Jetpens currently has the Metropolitan listed for $14.50 (plain black, fine nib), which is the best pricing I've seen on the pen.  (LINK HERE)  And if you spend $25 or more you get free shipping!      

Handwritten review.  The ink is Platinum Blue-Black, and the paper is Clairefontaine French-ruled.