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PizzaDude
January 11th, 2016, 02:02 PM
As a male in the manufacturing field, I have to be careful I don't veer too far off the conservative path that was laid at our company over 200 years ago, however since I am into fountain pens and want to use something besides blue and black I was looking for recommendations for other colors as well. I was leaning towards some medium brown colors like toffee or greens. Any advice???

For the record if I worked at a more "hip" employer I would have no issue writing with purple or dark orange, but that just wouldn't fly here.

sgtstretch
January 11th, 2016, 02:39 PM
Diamine Sherwood Green

brunico
January 11th, 2016, 02:49 PM
I was leaning towards some medium brown colors like toffee

If you are talking about toffee rather than brown, you have lost any pretension to masculinity.

http://imgs.xkcd.com/blag/doghouse_color_wheel_altered.png

See xkcd (http://blog.xkcd.com/2010/05/03/color-survey-results/).

da vinci
January 11th, 2016, 04:49 PM
Diamine green black perhaps?

Jon Szanto
January 11th, 2016, 05:27 PM
http://i.imgur.com/1EML8Rg.jpg

penwash
January 11th, 2016, 05:33 PM
Why, manufacturing, you say?
Diamine Ancient Copper, of course.
If they ever give you the weird look, just show them the label on the bottle.

AzJon
January 11th, 2016, 06:18 PM
You could go for the slightly obvious Montblanc Toffee Brown. It's a nice color that still looks rather professional.

Sailor Kenshin
January 11th, 2016, 06:24 PM
As a male in the manufacturing field, I have to be careful I don't veer too far off the conservative path that was laid at our company over 200 years ago, however since I am into fountain pens and want to use something besides blue and black I was looking for recommendations for other colors as well. I was leaning towards some medium brown colors like toffee or greens. Any advice???

For the record if I worked at a more "hip" employer I would have no issue writing with purple or dark orange, but that just wouldn't fly here.

Noodler's El Lawrence, AKA Motor Oil.

Dreck
January 11th, 2016, 06:42 PM
I was leaning towards some medium brown colors like toffee

If you are talking about toffee rather than brown, you have lost any pretension to masculinity.

http://imgs.xkcd.com/blag/doghouse_color_wheel_altered.png

See xkcd (http://blog.xkcd.com/2010/05/03/color-survey-results/).

I was a pressman when I was younger, and used to refer to colors by their number from the Pantone Matching System.

FredRydr
January 11th, 2016, 07:00 PM
MB Toffee Brown is my favorite retro ink that I use with a flex nib for 115-year-old-style writing on vintage postcards and the like. Sepia would serve as well. I wouldn't call that feminine, or even effeminate. But it isn't blue, black or blue/black, either. Time to come out of the ink closet.

Fred

Miz Black Crow
January 11th, 2016, 11:08 PM
First I say: screw the gender-color association. Pink used to be for boys (back when we started coloring babies), now it's for girls. Be yourself. Put whatever damn color you want in your pen. Live Yo Life!

However, I will keep this list of recommendations to colors which I find would both be attractive and professional, along with easy-to-read:

Noodler's Red-Black is very professional, waterproof, and (to me) quite lovely. There's a great review of it on FPN here (http://www.fountainpennetwork.com/forum/topic/220157-noodlers-red-black/).

Noodler's Golden Brown is a lovely shading waterproof brown (review here (http://www.fountainpennetwork.com/forum/topic/220945-noodlers-golden-brown/)).

I'd also add a +1 for Diamine Ancient Copper with the caveat that it is not waterproof.

Noodler's Legal Lapis is a green-black and is quite attractive (http://www.fountainpennetwork.com/forum/topic/236080-noodlers-legal-lapis/).

Rohrer & Klingner Scabiosa is an iron gall muted purple (waterproof). Review (http://www.fountainpennetwork.com/forum/topic/161028-rohrer-klingner-scabiosa/).

Caran D'Ache Ultraviolet is not, in fact, ultra-violet so much as a lovely subdued / muted purple. Really really pretty review (http://www.fountainpennetwork.com/forum/topic/283214-ultra-violet-caran-dache/).

Hope this helps :) And good luck!

Jon Szanto
January 11th, 2016, 11:41 PM
First I say: screw the gender-color association. Pink used to be for boys (back when we started coloring babies), now it's for girls. Be yourself. Put whatever damn color you want in your pen. Live Yo Life!

Here's proof you can have a masculine ink and sheen all in one package:

http://i211.photobucket.com/albums/bb204/EnvoyC/FP/sheenink.jpg

The Good Captain
January 12th, 2016, 01:50 AM
Diamine Salamander, Macassar, Asa Blue, Evergreen are interesting possibilities, as are Cult Pens/Diamine Deep Dark Purple, Green and Orange. How about Noodler's Midway Blue, G I Green, Green Marine, North African Violet or Liberty's Elysium?

pensplash
January 12th, 2016, 07:48 AM
Dive in, rock some purple. No one will dare bust on you for a bit of color. You have grown in stature. It's 20flippin'16.

D.

ppmiranda
January 12th, 2016, 10:39 AM
My recommendation: Graf von Faber-Castell moss green.

It's obviously green, but dark enough to grant it a "serious" vibe. It's very sober. I use at work and no one ever questioned me about it. Can't say the same for purples and turquoises.

Dreck
January 12th, 2016, 10:58 AM
My recommendation: Graf von Faber-Castell moss green.

It's obviously green, but dark enough to grant it a "serious" vibe. It's very sober. I use at work and no one ever questioned me about it. Can't say the same for purples and turquoises.

That's an excellent point. Sailor Kenshin mentioned El Lawrence, which is a dirty-swampwater, Cthuhlu-esque green. IIRC, there are quite a few "serious" greens (http://www.gouletpens.com/bottled-ink/c/14/?facetValueFilter=Tenant~Ink_Color%3Agreen) available.

AzJon
January 12th, 2016, 11:41 AM
First I say: screw the gender-color association. Pink used to be for boys (back when we started coloring babies), now it's for girls. Be yourself. Put whatever damn color you want in your pen. Live Yo Life!

Here's proof you can have a masculine ink and sheen all in one package:

http://i211.photobucket.com/albums/bb204/EnvoyC/FP/sheenink.jpg

Ah yes, the venerable Wink line. It has amazing shadiness...er...shading.

Haga888
January 12th, 2016, 05:28 PM
Diamine Evergreen is a Green-Black that leans closer to Black. Iroshizuku Yama-guri is a Brown-Black that also leans towards black. I think those two would meet your subtle colour requirements quite well.

fountainpenkid
January 12th, 2016, 06:06 PM
As others have said, a darker brown is a viable option. Ancient Copper is a great ink--reliable, saturated, and not prone to staining (from my experience).

bluesea
January 12th, 2016, 06:28 PM
De Atramentis Johan Sebastian Bach. Its a darkish brown with purple undertones that gives a conservative character, without being easily identifiable without close analysis.

Jon Szanto
January 12th, 2016, 06:30 PM
As others have said, a darker brown is a viable option. Ancient Copper is a great ink--reliable, saturated, and not prone to staining (from my experience).

I would simply add one caveat: it seems to be fairly common knowledge, and certainly widely reported, that AC has a great tendency to not just nib creep, but build up of residue. I've actually had the ink grow crystalline-like structures in a pen that was capped for a couple days. A quick Googling brings up many discussions and images...

http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7032/6721127831_e6d11916ba.jpg

PizzaDude
January 12th, 2016, 08:20 PM
Well, I greatly appreciate all the suggestions, but I believe I have found literally the perfect ink...

http://www.gouletpens.com/de-atramentis-tobacco-scented-35ml-bottled-fountain-pen-ink/p/DA2202

FredRydr
January 16th, 2016, 09:02 PM
Yeah, that bottle's label looks masculine. They could have gone for chewing tobacco on the label so there'd be no doubt about it.

Fred

PizzaDude
January 18th, 2016, 07:19 PM
Yeah, that bottle's label looks masculine. They could have gone for chewing tobacco on the label so there'd be no doubt about it.

Fred

Well, it would be great for me because I work in the tobacco industry.