Mike Sauer
ben
At work, I keep a written log book for daily events. I also find it
easier to write out short FAX'es rather than typing them up. There are
also about 4000 PostIts stuck to my monitor. The wordprocessor/editor
get used for things that need to be in electronic form: manuals that
customers may get, documents that get editied a lot, source code, etc.
Home use is mainly limited to check writing and bill payment, but I
don't do much wordprocessing there, either.
--
Matt Donadio (don...@isptechinc.com) | 43 Leopard Rd, Suite 102
Sr. Software Engineer | Paoli, PA 19301-1552
Image & Signal Processing, Inc. | Phone: +1 610 407 4391
http://www.isptechinc.com | FAX: +1 610 407 4405
Bernadette Fritsche
MSauer1735 wrote:
>
> I am curious how people use their pens on a daily basis. What do you write and
> how do you use writing with a pen along with the use of a word processor.
>
> Mike Sauer
--
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bl...@toad.net
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Most of my non email writing consists of signing or initialing approval
on various "stuff". IMHO this is where the non-standard ink colors are
at their best. Right now Shaffer Bordeaux, Parker Emerald Green, and
Rotring Brilliant Red are in play.
Occasionally get to put a short note back to staff on the bottom of a
memo from them.
Ted Fichtenholtz
ted...@worldnet.att.net
The personal handwritten note is underestimated. Not only a good
opportunity to use a nice pen, but it will attract much more attention from
the recipient than email, faxes, and form letters.
Rarely send cards anymore. Two or three sentences, handwritten on good
quality paper conveys more meaning than a high priced, pre-printed store
bough greeting.
I use a medium point and try to use bold or bright colors (Penmen, J
Herbin). I don't want my signature confused with a ball point.
Ed
e...@snet.net
I also write long letters to people using my pens, and of course if I am required
to sign something... fountain pen time!
My reports and lab work... this stuff is all word processed.
MSauer1735 wrote:
> I am curious how people use their pens on a daily basis. What do you write and
> how do you use writing with a pen along with the use of a word processor.
>
> Mike Sauer
<running and ducking>
munz <muns...@agtelco.com> wrote:
>great for doodling, meeting notes, notes to myself, checks, personal letters, etc.
>and when I need to really think about the wording.
>I use a (shudder) ballpoint when I need to press down hard on a multipart form.
>ben
>MSauer1735 wrote:
>I am curious how people use their pens on a daily basis. What do you write and
>how do you use writing with a pen along with the use of a word processor.
>Mike Sauer
I actually read something in a very old book: People used to write
letters!! By hand, on paper. Imagine that! Don't tell anyone,
but I have done it, too. (Maybe some day they'll discover a cure.)
>I am curious how people use their pens on a daily basis. What do you write and
>how do you use writing with a pen along with the use of a word processor.
Anything where I truly want to concentrate on what I'm writing. I find
writing with a good fountain pen that least distracting method of
transcribing my thoughts, though I must confess that I find dragon
naturally speaking a close second.
- Miles of notes with my class work.
- yards of notes with my businiess.
- Endless letters - for the simple pleasure of writing
- Much doodling to distract me from my computer.
- any trivial excuse to put a nib on paper "cause it's fun"
My real email address can be translated from the line below if anyone wishes to reach me by email
wbx at shaw dot wave dot ca
Thanks
Willie
Regards,
Jeff
--
Jeffrey A. Bourque, CBC
President
Hemsing Advertising, Inc. & Signature by Hemsing
755 W. Big Beaver Road
Suite 1120
Troy, MI 48084
USA
Tel: 248-362-0448
Fax: 248-362-3884
E-Mail: ad...@mindspring.com
URL: http://www.hemsingad.com for Hemsing Advertising, Inc. or
http://www.signatureonline.com for Signature Online
ted...@hotmail.com wrote:
Let me be the second -trial- lawyer to respond. I write all my legal papers
in concept with a fp. I mostly use a Pelikan M600 medium nib, or a M800 fine
nib. Sometimes I use a Parker 75 medium nib or Sonnet fine nib. Signing is
done with the M600 or my Conway Stewart broad nib. These are my regular pens.
Rick van Coevorden
Otherwise... most higher end pens are like jewelry. I use 'em to dress up a
shirt pocket, look good in an organizer, or to hold in my hand during a
meeting as an emphasis pointer.
Who says men "can't accessorize"?
\burt
Like the comment about "tattooing cats", tho... I renamed my cat
"sharkbait". Really pisses off my 15-year old daughter who likes that
walking carpet fuzz that eats.... heh heh heh :-)
MSauer1735 wrote:
> I am curious how people use their pens on a daily basis. What do you write and
> how do you use writing with a pen along with the use of a word processor.
>
> Mike Sauer
Actually, the comment was "tattooing kittens" not tattooing cats. So,
as the father of a 15-year-old girl, did you also like the poster's
"convert virgins" comment? I found the post rather creepy myself.
--
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bl...@toad.net
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On to pens.
Lessee: I have a Sheaffer desk pen, don't know the model, but it's the old
style one with the 14k nib integrated into the pen body. Model name eludes
me at the moment.
Normally, I walk around with at least 4 pens. Two of them are always a pair
of Cross Solos, one red with red ink, and one blue with blue ink, both fine
nibs, in a leather double-pen case which is normally in my briefcase. A
third pen is in my Daytimer - lately, it's been my Stipula Etruria (which,
after some adjustment, now works really well). I carry my Omas Celluloid
Arco Vermeil in a single-pen leather case in my pocket. Both the Stipula
and Omas have fine nibs, and are loaded with black ink, currently Sheaffer.
I tend to like the Namiki ink also, mainly because it dries *BLACK*, not
grey, and has much the same characteristics as Penman... without the
clogging factor!
I've spent a lot of time trying different pens and different inks on
different paper, and I've found that every pen and ink I've tried bleeds
HORRIBLY on Filofax scheduler refills. Daytimer refills are better, but it
seems like Day-Runner paper takes almost every ink without bleeding or
feathering.
I use fountain pens almost exclusively, including on multi-part forms, for
which I've found that a stiff nibbed pen seems to work. The biggest problem
with multi-part forms is that they use a powder to separate the parts, so I
have to brush off the top page (the one I'm writing on) rather vigorously to
keep from messing up the nib. Yes, I typically use a cheap nibbed pen (like
a Cross Solo or a Pilot Varsity disposable) for those forms.
Tip: I always carry some tissues with me in a zip-lock baggie. That way, I
always have something to wipe off the nib after it gunks up, whatever paper
I'm writing on.
I am a programmer by trade, so I'm constantly writing down notes, comments,
and program trace information. All with a fountain pen. I do crossword
puzzles with fountain pens as well - seems like there's nothing as erudite
as doing a crossword puzzle with a fine nibbed fountain pen while sitting in
a Victorian-style wing chair (my favorite chair in the entire house).
\burt
Bernadette Landolf-Fritsche wrote in message <369EA19F...@toad.net>...
>I actually read something in a very old book: People used to write
>letters!! By hand, on paper. Imagine that! Don't tell anyone,
>but I have done it, too. (Maybe some day they'll discover a cure.)
P.S. Can anyone recommend the best kind of inkk to write notes on my
computr monitor?
<innocent blink>
Those S.O.B.'s at the Mark McGwire stand!!!!
I rarely use a ballpoint, my hands are so accustomed to FP's that extended
writing with a BP becomes uncomfortable.
Stangely, when I am working on my novel, I use the FP, and "speak" it in to the
computer. When I write my articles for the papers, or when I do my thesis,I
use the computer. Go figure.
Jason
remove "nojunk" for e-mail replies
>I think that Uni Prockey water based Pigment ink would function. It is non
>erasable.
>But... I can not understand why you really have to do that?. Monitors are
>more expensive than paper and after a few notes that monitor is useless for
>computing :-)
>/kenneth
----------------------------<snip>------------------------------
We're the state government. Equipment is always turning over, and old
ones shipped off to warehouses. I just package up the monitors,
with corrected text, and ship them off to my journal publishers.
;-Q
This week top on my list is a "no name" eyedropper, and a Sheaffer circa 1920's
with a number #2 "self filling nib".
I know a lot of folks collect and store they pens...for me the joy is the
"hunt" and using my pens. I will let others save their "mint" pens...my choice
is use them and enjoying my fountain pens.
Jim Gaston
http://www.fountain-pens.com
> Otherwise... most higher end pens are like jewelry. I use 'em to dress up a
> shirt pocket . .
. . . absolutely a *must* in SEA. Besides the star on the hood of the car
nothing beats the white blob on the top of a pen. Upper-class Bangkokians love
to show off their wealth and even an office clerk has minimum two fake "gold"
ball pens in his shirt pocket.
Egon
(FPs don't work well under tropic climate. They don't like changes in humidity
and temperature by changing from outdoor to AC rooms and v.v.
Especially ink flow of FPs with the white blob is a pain in the ass)
SMSmith007 wrote in message
<19990117105927...@ng-ch1.aol.com>...
Palace9 wrote:
>
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