I've always taken a not-full fill as a given, having started out not knowing the methods for achieving one, and now rarely needing one.
I've always taken a not-full fill as a given, having started out not knowing the methods for achieving one, and now rarely needing one.
Okay, you convinced me: some DA USC (that I overfilled on a too-dry Nemosine) is going back into the bottle.
My other pen is a Montblanc.
And my other blog is a tumblr!
And my latest ebook, for spooky wintery reading:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0CM2NGSSD
I usually end up getting on a roll with a certain pen and ink combination, and then I write till it's dry then refill with the same ink, then write till it's dry again, then refill again, etc., until I decide to change for any number of reasons. If the converter is dry at that point, then I just clean it and the pen and let them dry, and go onto the next pen/ink combo. If the converter is half full or less, I'll dump out the remainder of the ink in the sink, and if it's mostly full, it goes back into the bottle if I feel confident that there's been no contamination.
Quid rides? Mutato nomine de te fabula narratur. — Horace
(What are you laughing at? Just change the name and the joke’s on you.)
I'm a one ink, and (mostly) one pen user. Although as I write exclusively with iron gall inks, using up a whole fill is often problematic, as the nib develops a crust and the flow is just terrible, so the last bit - 1/3 and below of sac or pen body - goes back into the bottle, before I flush the pen with tap water and vinegar.
Definitely both.
For my daily users I like to find which one of my black inks that works best in the pen and then I just write those dry and refill with the same.
If I try an ink and it doesn't work I dump it back in it's sample vial if I have one or down the sink with some regret.
With color inks I usually run the pen dry unless I really dislike using the ink for some reason.
I like converter or piston pens where I can do a partial fill.
Regards, Chrissy | My Review Blog: inkyfountainpens
After I decide what ink I like best in a particular pen I do complete fills and always use the same ink in it . I rinse the pen when it writes dry and refill with the same ink . I would have no problem with putting ink back in the bottle since I know exactly which bottle it came from . I usually only have 5 or 6 pens inked at any one time so they are pretty easy to keep up with .
Eddie
Quid rides? Mutato nomine de te fabula narratur. — Horace
(What are you laughing at? Just change the name and the joke’s on you.)
My other pen is a Montblanc.
And my other blog is a tumblr!
And my latest ebook, for spooky wintery reading:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0CM2NGSSD
I'm finding this thread interesting because I've been cogitating exactly this over the past few weeks - I have inks I'd like to change, but the level of ink in each pen is still considerable, I've thought about dumping the contents back into the original bottle, but have never done it yet.
Fill 'er up. Use it up or dump it into the sink.
I have far too much ink to worry about it...
VertOlive (December 23rd, 2018)
Reading this reminds me that I've got an eyedropper that's gone beyond forever with The Wrong Ink aboard. It's too dry for the pen and I'm tired of the color. Time for a flush and new ink!
"Nolo esse salus sine vobis ...” —St. Augustine
I believe this depends on several factors. How well you clean your pens before you fill them and how long has the ink been in the pen. I am OCD about cleaning and drying my pens, and when I add a converter full of ink to write a review and it's in there for less than 3 days, then I have been known to sometimes put the remaining ink back into the sample that I took it from. After all, the ink was only a sample to start with.
Regards, Chrissy | My Review Blog: inkyfountainpens
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