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Chrissy
January 31st, 2016, 08:57 AM
My latest ink is Diamine Amber

I thought I would try Diamine Amber because I found a bottle of Pelikan Edelstein Amber last year and I really like the colour. So I wanted to see if Diamine Amber was similar.

However, I found it more of a yellow/orange than P.E. Amber and less saturated than Diamine Marigold (that I also have to review) and Sheaffer King's Gold. It has that very bright eye-popping tone in it like Montblanc Gandhi and Diamine Pumpkin that my scanner finds almost impossible to reproduce. I tried my best to make as many adjustments as I could to get it as close as possible to the colour of the ink I see on the paper.

On the whole, I think Amber should be a little more brown than this in order for it to look like it's namesake.

It wrote straight away without any hard starts or skipping. It lubricated the nib well enough, flowed well and didn't feel at all dry when I was writing with it. However, it took longer to dry than I thought it would. As with many yellow/orange inks it can be a bit difficult to read, particularly if you like F or EF nibs. So if you use it you may want to try it in a broader nib as that makes it easier to read. As you can see if you compare the writing from my 1.1 stub and my F nib. On the other hand, I've seen many inks that are more difficult to read than this one. So it's not so bad.

It's not water resistant at all. It washed away after less than 30 seconds. So I wouldn't recommend using it for addressing postcards or envelopes in wet weather areas.


Neither waterproof nor water resistant.


Bearing in mind the paper I use is thick with a shiny surface, and I used a Lamy F nib, M nib and a 1.1mm stub nib, this ink took 18-20 secs to dry. That's slower than some other inks I've reviewed recently.


It's not a very saturated ink. There are some gold and orange inks that are more saturated than this one.


It is currently available in 80ml glass bottles or 30ml plastic bottles


Diamine (http://www.diamineinks.co.uk/listings.aspx?catid=14) sell it directly to end-users on their web-site.


It's a reasonable price.


23071

gbryal
May 17th, 2016, 07:28 PM
Slight necromancy, but has anyone else used this and experienced good flow? Most of my nibs are EF and F and get nearly nothing from this ink, but even my couple of B nibs go dry very quickly, and only get flow on very porous paper; forget anything smooth.

edit -- never mind. It does hate some of my nibs, but looks fine in my edison with a broad jowo.

Pira
May 18th, 2016, 08:49 AM
...the thing with amber though, is that it covers a fairly wide spectrum of yellowish shades. So technically this is 'an' amber....but not the one that most of us normally associate with the colour label.

I missed the Edelstein Amber, but have been on the hunt for the one that pushes all my buttons for ages, and that has nothing to do with my Nordic DNA. Well probably nothing. The search continues for me.

As for this ink, I find it a very pretty ink that shades generously when using a flexi dip nib but I can't say I'd want to read much written with this (or any in the stable of lighter shades of yellow ink). I prefer to use it in drawings..... :)