In December 2007 Pilot’s created exclusive line of inks called Iroshizuku. I believe they may well be the most well known fountain pen inks in pen world. These inks are supposed to work in any pen with any nib on any paper and in any situation. I haven’t tried all of them but so far the Iroshizuku inks I’ve tried were behaving flawlessly. The bottles are stunning although they have their issues: if the ink is left unused for some time the cap tends to stick and break when you try to twist it open. It happened to my bottle of Shin-Ryoku.
Anyway Iroshizuku line of inks counts 24 “standard” colors. Three inks were made some time ago for Tokyo stores: Edo-Murasaki, Fukagawa-Nezu and Shimbashi-Iro.After seeing the scans over blogosphere I wish these three were accesible, because they look interesting. Edo – Murasaki looks cool while Murasaki – Shikibu is of no interest to me. Even though I kind of like Fuyu-Syogun I find Fukagawa-Nezu more compelling.
Nothing indicates Pilot plans on extending the official line any time soon (if ever) so let’s take a look at what’s possible to obtain from dealers and online shops.
I don’t have all of the inks but sooner or later I’ll try to check them all. With time I’ll review all of them (hopefully).
- Ajisai
- Ama-Iro
- Asa-Gao
- Chiku-Rin
- Fuyu-Gaki
- Fuyu-Syogun
- Ina-Ho
- Kiri-Same
- Kon-Peki
- Kosumosu
- Ku-Jaku
- Momiji
- Murasaki-Shikibu
- Shin-Kai
- Shin-Ryoku
- Syo-Ro
- Take-Sumi
- Tsuki-Yo
- Tsukushi
- Tsutsuji
- Tsuyu-Kusa
- Yama-Budo
- Yama-Guri
- Yu-Yake
Ina-Ho is intriguing ink, it’s hard to describe its color. Let’s just say it’s interesting, because it really is, take a look at the chromatography. But first the bottle:
Bottle
Ink Splash
Drops of ink on kitchen towel
Chromatography
Color ID
Color range
Calendar – Kaweco Sport Classic, broad nib
Suprising chromatography! It looks like a comet 🙂
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