word or hand

sdsioux

Really Really Experienced
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May 3, 2010
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I like to write some of my ideas long hand to get an idea of what I want to do with the story. It seems like the fountain pen (have a nice one) is my friend. What do you think?
 
I really don't get on with fountain pens at all - they always end up with crossed nibs. :eek:

However, I agree that sometimes writing it out instead of typing seems to pull the ideas out more easily. I prefer a black Bic (no, other brands will not usually do for me, too scratchy or the ink gets erratic) and whatever paper is within reach.
 
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I really don't get on with fountain pens at all - they always end up with crossed nibs. :eek:

However, I agree that sometimes writing it out instead of typing seems to pull the ideas out more easily. I prefer a black Bic (no, other brands will not usually do for me, too scratchy or the ink gets erratic) and whatever paper is within reach.

I invested a fair amount of money in a fountain pen awhile ago and it is superb. The ink flows freely but keep in mind this is a 14 karat gold nib. It allows me to write smoothly. Just a thought
 
What I think is that I can no longer read anything I write in longhand.
 
I invested a fair amount of money in a fountain pen awhile ago and it is superb. The ink flows freely but keep in mind this is a 14 karat gold nib. It allows me to write smoothly. Just a thought
It isn't the fault of the fountain pen nib's ink flow - I can't write quickly enough to keep up with my thoughts without pressing through the nib of a fountain pen hard enough to cross it! :(

If I really want the choice of ink colours and flow offered by fountain pens, I use a Kaweco sport rollerball (with diamine ink cartridges), but that's more for things where I can take my time.
 
It isn't the fault of the fountain pen nib's ink flow - I can't write quickly enough to keep up with my thoughts without pressing through the nib of a fountain pen hard enough to cross it! :(

If I really want the choice of ink colours and flow offered by fountain pens, I use a Kaweco sport rollerball (with diamine ink cartridges), but that's more for things where I can take my time.

Do you still send out hand written letters? I do. There seems to be a personal touch especially if it is a bit romantic
 
Do you still send out hand written letters? I do. There seems to be a personal touch especially if it is a bit romantic

I send out handwritten notes, but not letters. I couldn't keep it legible for that long. I do think thank-you notes for friends and family should be handwritten (and should be slow mailed).
 
I've heard other people suggest writing like this as an experiment, but I just can't do it. I 1) type very quickly and 2) go back and edit sentences a lot. Like, a lot a lot. If I wrote stories by hand, they'd be filled with lots of crossed out sentences and insertions and misspellings. When I write on greeting cards, I have to think very carefully and write on a piece of scrap paper first.
 
Do you still send out hand written letters? I do.
Yes - mainly because older relatives don't read emails as careuly as they read something on paper, and an e card isn't welcomed by them either.
 
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