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The Writer's Lifestyle
Ink Cartridge vs Converter vs Piston: Which Fountain Pen Fill System Is Right for You?
Every fountain pen uses one of three filling systems: a disposable cartridge, a refillable converter, or a built-in piston. They all put ink in the pen. They feel completely different to live with.
This guide compares the three systems head-to-head — ease of use, ink capacity, cost per page, travel reliability, maintenance — so you can choose the right setup for how you actually write. Every fountain pen in the Wordsworth & Black line uses a cartridge-converter design, so you get the flexibility of both systems in a single pen. Here's what that means in daily use and when one system pulls ahead of the others.
Key Takeaways
Cartridges hold ~0.7 mL of ink, install in seconds, and cost ~$1.25 per mL — best for travel, gifting, and quick starts
Converters hold ~1.0 mL, accept any bottled ink, and bring per-mL cost down to ~$0.43 — best for daily writers and color exploration
Pistons hold ~1.5–2.0 mL, are bottled-ink-only, and are most often found on enthusiast pens
Every Wordsworth & Black fountain pen ships with both a cartridge and a converter — supporting both systems on demand, no second purchase required
A cartridge-converter pen is the most flexible choice for 90% of fountain pen owners — start with cartridges, graduate to bottled ink whenever ready
How Each Fill System Works
Cartridge
A cartridge is a small plastic capsule pre-filled with fountain pen ink, sealed at one end. You push it onto the section's intake nipple, which pierces the seal, and ink begins flowing down to the nib via capillary action. When the cartridge runs dry, you pull it off and snap in a new one.
The Wordsworth & Black cartridge range uses the international standard size — meaning the same cartridge fits the Crest, Erudite, and Majesti Gold without any compatibility headaches.
Converter
A converter is a refillable cartridge-shaped device with a built-in piston. You snap it onto the section just like a cartridge, then dip the nib into a bottle of ink and twist the piston knob — the converter draws ink up through the nib and into the chamber. When empty, you refill from the bottle.
Every Wordsworth & Black fountain pen ships with both a cartridge and a converter in the box. No additional purchase, no proprietary lock-in. You choose which system to use on any given day.
Piston
A piston (also called piston-fill) is the same mechanism as a converter — except built into the pen itself rather than installed as a separate component. The barrel of the pen is the ink reservoir, with a piston rod inside and a turning knob at the far end. Twist the knob and the piston draws ink directly into the barrel.
Piston pens are bottled-ink-only. They don't accept cartridges. Piston-fill is an enthusiast design — the Wordsworth & Black line uses the more versatile cartridge-converter approach because it covers both use cases in one pen.
Head-to-Head Comparison
Variable
Cartridge
Converter
Piston
Ink capacity
~0.7 mL (international short)
~1.0 mL
~1.5–2.0 mL
Pages per fill
~150–200
~200–250
~300–450
Refill time
5 seconds
30–60 seconds
30–60 seconds
Ink color options
Standard cartridge colors
Any bottled ink
Any bottled ink
Cost per mL
~$1.25
~$0.43 (bottled)
~$0.43 (bottled)
Travel friendliness
Excellent
Good
Good (with caveats)
Available in W&B line
Yes (included)
Yes (included)
—
Best for
Travel, gifting
Daily writing
Enthusiast use
Ink Capacity by Fill System (mL) — W&B Reference
Ink Capacity by Fill System
W&B Cartridge (short)
0.7 mL · ~175 pgs
W&B Cartridge (long)
1.4 mL · ~325 pgs
W&B Converter
1.0 mL · ~225 pgs
Piston-fill (reference)
1.8 mL · ~400 pgs
Page estimates based on Crest medium nib, ~250 words per A5 page
The Wordsworth & Black long cartridge holds nearly as much ink as a piston-fill barrel. Combined with the included converter, the Crest covers most fill scenarios without owning a piston pen.
When to Choose a Cartridge
Cartridges win in three situations: travel, gifting, and the first three months of fountain pen ownership.
Travel
A cartridge pen handles airline cabin pressure better than any other system because there's no air gap in the ink supply. Spare Wordsworth & Black cartridges fit in a coin pouch, weigh nothing, and don't leak in luggage.
Gifting
Cartridge pens work the moment they're unboxed. No bottle, no converter to install, no five-minute fill ceremony. For Father's Day, graduations, holidays, and any gift situation — choose cartridges.
Learning the Pen
A new fountain pen owner has enough to learn without adding the converter routine. Cartridges remove that friction completely. Start with cartridges for the first 1–3 months, then graduate to bottled ink via the included converter once you know which nib and ink combination you prefer.
Predictable Volume
Cartridges hold a known amount of ink. If you write 200 words a day and a cartridge gives you a week, you can budget your ink usage to the day.
Our take: Most fountain pen guides treat cartridges as a stepping stone — something you outgrow. They aren't. Cartridges are the right choice in real, recurring situations. Even experienced fountain pen owners who fill their daily pens from bottles often keep cartridges in a travel kit. The right answer isn't one fill system. It's the right system for each pen in your rotation.
When to Choose a Converter
Converters win for anyone who writes by hand most days and wants to explore the full bottled ink line.
Color Flexibility
The biggest reason to use a converter: bottled ink unlocks the full Wordsworth & Black ink range — Royal Blue, Mysterious Black, Racing Green, plus the seasonal colors. Cartridges cover the standard colors; bottled ink covers everything.
Cost Per Page
A 30 mL bottle of ink contains the equivalent of roughly 40 cartridges' worth of ink at about a third of the cost per millilitre. Within the first three bottles, the converter approach pays for itself many times over.
Cleaning Made Easy
The converter doubles as a cleaning tool. Empty the converter, screw it back onto the section, dip in cold water, and use the piston to draw clean water through the feed. It's the easiest way to flush a fountain pen — and another reason every Wordsworth & Black pen ships with a converter included.
The Filling Ritual
Unscientific but real: filling a converter from a bottle of ink is a small ritual that meaningfully increases how much people use their fountain pens. The 30-second pause becomes a tiny moment of attention before writing — the kind of thing that turns a tool into a habit.
Where Pistons Fit In
Piston-fillers are the enthusiast end of the fountain pen world. They hold more ink than converters, look cleaner inside demonstrator (transparent) barrels, and offer a slightly more satisfying filling experience. The Wordsworth & Black line doesn't use piston-fill because the cartridge-converter design covers both use cases in a single pen with less compromise.
Piston Strengths
Higher capacity (~1.8 mL vs 1.0 mL converter) — fewer refills for high-volume writers
Cleaner aesthetics in demonstrator pens (no cartridge or converter visible)
Mechanical pleasure of the integrated filling action
Piston Trade-Offs
Bottled ink only — no cartridge fallback for travel
Harder to clean — the barrel itself holds ink, so flushing requires multiple full piston cycles
Single fill system — no flexibility to switch on the fly
For most writers, the included converter on a Wordsworth & Black pen captures 90% of the piston experience with cartridge backup for travel. If you specifically want piston-fill, an enthusiast pen from a piston-focused brand is the right addition — but as a second pen, not a replacement for the everyday Crest or Erudite.
Cost Per Page: Five-Year Math
System
Pen Cost
Ink Cost (5 yr)
Total
Per Page
W&B Crest + cartridges only
$40
~$80
$120
$0.066
W&B Crest + cartridges + bottled ink mix
$40
~$56
$96
$0.053
W&B Crest + bottled ink only (converter)
$40
~$48
$88
$0.005
Piston-fill enthusiast pen + bottled ink
$130+
~$56
$186+
$0.102
The result: The cheapest writing system over five years is the Crest Set used exclusively with the included converter and bottled ink. The most expensive is a premium piston pen, where you pay for craftsmanship rather than per-page economics.
Mixing Systems Across Your Pen Rotation
Most experienced fountain pen owners settle on a mixed rotation. A common Wordsworth & Black setup:
Pen
Fill
Use Case
Crest Set (with converter)
Bottled Royal Blue
Daily desk pen — high volume, color flexibility
Crest Set (with cartridge)
Standard cartridges
Travel pen — pocketable, no bottle needed
Erudite (with converter)
Bottled Mysterious Black
Office/meeting pen — signature-ready
Majesti Gold (with converter)
Bottled Mysterious Black
Milestone signature pen — desk display
The right answer isn't one fill system — it's the right system for each pen in your kit. Because every Wordsworth & Black pen ships with both cartridge and converter, the same pen can play both roles on demand.
Wordsworth & Black Fill System Compatibility
The cartridge-converter approach across the line means full interoperability. Whatever you buy today, it works with what you already own.
Pen
Cartridge
Converter (included)
Notes
Crest Set
International standard
Yes
5 interchangeable nib sizes
Erudite Collection
International standard
Yes
Premium metal body
Majesti Gold
International standard
Yes
18K gilded nib
The same cartridge pack works in every pen. The same converter system works in every pen. The same bottled ink line fills all of them. No proprietary fragmentation.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do Wordsworth & Black pens come with a converter?
Yes — every fountain pen in our line ships with both a cartridge and a converter in the box. No separate purchase needed to use bottled ink.
Can I use international cartridges from other brands in my W&B pen?
Yes. Our pens use the international standard cartridge size, which is compatible with most non-proprietary cartridge brands. For best results with our specific ink formulations, we recommend our own cartridge range, but the system is open.
Can I refill a fountain pen cartridge with bottled ink?
Technically yes — with a blunt-tip syringe and a bottle of ink, you can refill spent cartridges and reuse them. It's slower than just using the included converter, and it introduces small hygiene concerns over time. Not recommended for routine use.
What's the difference between a converter and a piston?
Mechanically, none — both are piston mechanisms that draw ink from a bottle. The difference is where they live. A converter is a removable component you snap into a cartridge-compatible pen. A piston is integrated into the pen body and not removable. Converters give flexibility (cartridge fallback); pistons give slightly more capacity and cleaner aesthetics.
Will my fountain pen leak on a flight?
All fill systems can leak under cabin pressure changes, but cartridges are the most reliable on flights because there's no air gap. Converters leak more often if filled less than 80%. The fix for any pen: travel with it nib-up, either fully filled or fully empty, and inside a small zip-bag as insurance.
How often do I need to replace the converter?
With routine cleaning, a converter lasts the lifetime of the pen — years to decades. Replace only if the piston seal becomes loose (ink leaks back during writing) or the plastic chamber cracks.
Are eyedropper-fill pens worth considering?
Eyedropper conversion — sealing the barrel and filling it directly with ink via a dropper — gives the largest ink capacity of any system (often 3+ mL). It's a niche modification, requires silicone grease on threads to prevent leaks, and is messier than the alternatives. Skip it as a beginner.
Final Verdict
For most fountain pen owners, the right answer is a cartridge-converter pen — the universal system that lets you start with cartridges and graduate to bottled ink when you're ready. Every Wordsworth & Black fountain pen is built around this approach, with both fill systems included in the box.
The Crest Set at $39.99 is the right starting point: ships with both cartridges and converter, accepts the entire international standard cartridge range, supports the full bottled ink line, and includes five interchangeable nib sizes for the price of most single-nib pens.
If you write more than 500 words a day, run the Crest exclusively with the converter and a bottle of Royal Blue bottled ink. That setup is the cheapest fountain pen writing system over five years — about half a cent per page.
→ Browse the full Wordsworth & Black Fountain Pen Collection