If I still wrote checks, I'd probably use a fine-point Sharpie. For endorsing the rare received check, I use whatever pen I have on me at the time.
If I still wrote checks, I'd probably use a fine-point Sharpie. For endorsing the rare received check, I use whatever pen I have on me at the time.
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I typically use Pelikan 4001 Blue Black. It's a mild iron gall ink. I have had to buy my last few bottles from vendors outside the US (UK) as Pelikan hasn't officially imported into the US since at least 2012, maybe longer.
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Brad "Words are, of course, the most powerful drug used by mankind" - Rudyard Kipling
"None of us can have as many virtues as the fountain-pen, or half its cussedness; but we can try." - Mark Twain
I use my Pilot Capless with Pilot Blue ink. and have done for years without a problem. That is also the pen and ink combination I use to write names and addresses on envelopes and no-one has complained yet. When it's dry I rub a candle over it on the envelopes. Just for safety.![]()
Regards, Chrissy| My Blog: inkyfountainpens
Here in this part of the world, checks are still "fashionable". We write, for example, 12 PDC (post dated checks - future dated checks) to cover contract for 12 months of rent, 36 PDC checks to cover that 3-year car loan, etc. etc. You get the drift.
For this reason, I want the checks to be written with permanent ink so that it can withstand any mishaps that may befall it in the intervening time it is in someone's care and the time it is eventually cashed in by the payee. Heaven forbid I am requested to re-write those many many checks because someone accidentally spilled their coffee on it. Avoiding criminal shenanigans is an added bonus, of course.
Before I rediscovered fountain pens, I'd write checks using the Uniball Signo. Now, I use mostly Noodler's bulletproof line of inks for this purpose.
Lloyd (March 26th, 2023)
Philippines to be exact. It's not really odd, but yeah, it is old-school and in this age of e-everything, quite inconvenient.
If you're a landlord, you'd want post dated checks so that you won't be bothered to knock on your tenants' door every month begging for the rent due. A check in hand is better than a promise from tenant/s to pay in cash or what have you, on so and so date. If the check bounces, you can show that later on as undeniable proof that tenant/s had bad faith, especially if things go so bad that you have to haul them to court.
Robert (March 27th, 2023)
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