Fabercastell Ambition Fountain Pen Op Art Water Lily Review

Past Jessica Coles

Recently I was pushed exterior of my comfort zone with pen reviews – you know, the comfort zone of the aforementioned three or four pen manufacturers that make a manner and size of pen that fits, that works, that feels good. Comfy. This fourth dimension, I had the chance to review a Faber Castell pen. A pen synthetic of metallic, and wood, and, well, not acrylic. Something outside of my condolement zone.

Just the manufacturer and textile weren't the but things exterior of my zone. I also had a pen with… a medium nib.

Medium nibs are not me. I'll permit a nib to kickoff with a medium width if it is to be ground into an italic or stub, but I don't exercise medium nibs. Ever.

The Faber-Castell Ambition pen originally pulled me in due to the combination of materials – several Ambition line wood-based pens were made with exotic woods; pearwood, coconut, walnut to proper name a few. I am quite familiar with acrylic, plastic, celluloid pens. All the same, I realized I often shy away from pens made of metallic or wood. When I contemplated the reason backside this, I realized that kit pens were to blame.

For those who accept not heard of kit pens, here'southward a brief introduction. I chronicle information technology to my years as a model builder – model airplanes, model ships, model rockets… I'll stop earlier I make myself into too much of a nerd.

Model kits are available for all of these items. Kits are made for many different skill levels, simply basically kits that are not too different from Legos. Kits are fabricated of plastic, wood, metallic or a mix of materials that are intended to be put together following step-by-footstep instructions so the finished production looks great. Only the tough steps such as cutting the woods or plastic from a blank sheet accept been completed for you.

Pen kits besides come with the preliminary steps completed – the barrel and section already cut out. Because they are more standardized, these kit pens take a recognizable feel. For some reason, I had acquainted wood and metal pens with these kit pens and I had stayed far abroad.

I couldn't take been more wrong.

Picking up the Ambition pen, the first thing I though of was luxury. Rich materials, a solid pen, a well made presentation box. The pen looks impressive – a warm chocolate-brown forest body and beautifully finished metal all around.

All of this admittedly changed as presently as I opened the box to the Faber Castell Appetite pen. Just picking upwards the pen felt luxurious – beautifully grained wood and heavy but incredibly well-counterbalanced metallic department, cap, and finial. The whole pen simply felt rich. Rich with luxury, materials, goodness.

Only the pecker – to me, medium has always meant generic. Too many years of trying out fountain pens from the novelty department of business organization supply stores I suppose! The medium on the Faber Castell pen was smooth and delicious right out of the box and has yet to skip in my testing.

Let me get this directly, though. This is non a heavy pen. I could write for hours holding it – but the balance throughout the body and section of the pen just feels like it is well-fabricated and expensive.

The Faber Castell Ambittion Pearwood pen comes in at 34g. The size (capped) is like to a Lamy Al-Star (shown beneath).

Nevertheless, uncapped, the Appetite is noticeable shorter and shorter than a Pilot Metro as well.

Posting the pens, the Ambition comes in between the 2. I found myself preferring to use the pen unposted (minor hands) simply when it is posted, the cap snaps on firmly and doesn't jiggle around.

The Ambition is a cartridge/converter fill pen and doesn't come with a standard international converter. Information technology did come up with a brusque standard international cartridge – if yous prefer to use cartridges, you lot can fit two short ones in the body for a quick alter if you write the first dry.

As I noted earlier, the bill wrote very smoothly right out of the box – no smoothing or adjusting necessary. No skipping. More than importantly to me, I loved the medium nib – this was not what I have experienced previously with this size. Usually a medium neb makes my handwriting look like I'm writing with a crayon – mushed together and unreadable. This pen simply felt… right. I felt like I was writing with an expensive, luxurious pen that performed its chore perfectly, the starting time time. Isn't that what more expensive pens should do?

But the Ambition isn't a tremendously expensive pen, either. $88 for a loftier end steel-nibbed pen – compare this to contempo releases from other manufacturers coming in effectually $150 – $200. And however, the Ambition beats all of those in writing experience.

I would not hesitate to recommend this pen to individuals who love writing, love beautiful pens or want something that lives upwards to the hope of luxury.


  • Paper: Galen Leather Co. A5 Everyday Book ($32 for three)
  • Pen:  Faber Castell Amition Pearwood (78.51 Euros or about $88)
  • Ink: Vinta Inks Collection Aegean Armada 1944 (30ml for $12.50)

Disclaimer: Some of the items in this review were provided for free for the purpose of this review. Other items in this review were purchased by me.  For more information, visit our About page.

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Source: https://www.wellappointeddesk.com/2019/08/pen-review-faber-castell-ambition-pearwood/

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