...or so argues Larry Marshall here;
http://www.larrydmarshall.com/twsbi-...sketching-pen/
...or so argues Larry Marshall here;
http://www.larrydmarshall.com/twsbi-...sketching-pen/
Oh, awesome. I wondered about that!
Very tempted to get a TWSBi mini with EF for my drawing... (the 1.1 I have now seems... not so easy to draw with... )
I like an EF too, although people do draw with stubs/italics;
E.g. Leigh Reyes' drawing with the Pilot Parallel pen (http://www.leighreyes.com/?p=3180) or Roz' Pitt calligraphy pen drawing http://rozwoundup.typepad.com/roz_wo...raphy-pen.html
Far be it from me to stop you buying another pen, but worth a try
I did a quick sketch with it to see how badly I would fail.
8658054506_e76da12c8e.jpg
So, obviously I *need* another TWSBi, right! I mean, can't draw like that. *cough*
That's a great recommendation for the TWSBI. I agree with everything he says. I'm very new to sketching,but I'm really enjoying both my Rotring Artpen (F & M nibs) and my Platinum Carbon pen (EF), but these are both quill pens and I do need to take care not to lose the cap. I don't post my fountain pens, so when I bought some art pens, I didn't even consider this feature.
Thanks for posting the link John.
Tannie - I think you need both!
There, does that help?
... Inspiration exists, but it has to find you working [Pablo Picasso] ...
The. Lack part at the end of the nib isn't a seal, is it?
Bookmarks