There's a particular moment that nearly every fountain pen enthusiast remembers. It's the first time the nib met the page — that smooth, effortless glide, the way ink flowed without pressure or friction, the quiet realisation that writing could feel like this.
If you're standing at the beginning of that journey, welcome. You're in the right place. Choosing your first fountain pen doesn't need to be overwhelming. With a little guidance, it becomes what it should be: an act of self-expression before you've even written a single word.
The Case for Writing Differently
Why a Fountain Pen?
Before we talk about nibs and ink, it's worth asking: why bother? After all, ballpoints are cheap, reliable, and entirely unremarkable — which is precisely the point.
A fountain pen invites you into a different relationship with writing. It slows you down, in the best possible way. It makes you more deliberate with your words. And because it's refillable, it's also one of the most sustainable choices you can make as a writer.
One pen, cared for properly, can last a lifetime. That's not a product — that's a companion.
Understanding the Nib
The Heart of the Pen
The nib is where everything happens. It's the finely crafted tip that meets the page, and choosing the right one makes all the difference to how your writing feels.
The nib — where craftsmanship meets the page
For beginners, we always recommend starting with a medium nib. It's forgiving on different paper types and gives a clear sense of how a fountain pen handles. If your handwriting tends to be small and precise, a fine nib offers more control. If you love expressive, flowing script — or have ambitions towards calligraphy — a broad nib opens the ink up beautifully.
Ideal for very small, precise handwriting. Minimal ink flow, maximum control. Best for detailed note-taking.
A versatile choice for neat, compact handwriting. Crisp lines with a satisfying feedback on the page.
The recommended starting point. Forgiving, smooth, and compatible with most paper types. Perfect for everyday writing.
Expressive and bold. Ideal for those drawn to calligraphy, journaling, or a more dramatic writing style.
Nibs are almost always made from steel or gold. Steel nibs write perfectly well and are where most enthusiasts begin. Gold nibs have a subtle responsiveness that adapts to the natural pressure of your hand — once you've written with one, it's difficult to go back.
Personality in a Bottle
Choosing Your Ink
Here's where things get genuinely exciting. The world of fountain pen ink is vast, vivid, and deeply personal. You're not simply choosing a colour — you're choosing a mood, a character, a signature.
Ink is personality — choose yours deliberately
If you're new to fountain pens, start with a bottled ink from a trusted maker. Cartridge inks are convenient, but bottled inks offer far more variety. A classic blue-black is a perfect first ink: versatile, quietly professional, and strikingly beautiful on the page.
From there, you might explore warm ambers, jewel-toned teals, or deep forest greens. Part of the joy is the discovery. One practical note: always check that your ink is compatible with your pen. Most quality inks are — but it's worth knowing before you fill up.
The Right Surface
Paper Matters More Than You Think
A fountain pen and notebook are partners. A beautiful pen on poor paper is like a fine wine in a paper cup — something essential is lost.
The right paper elevates every word you write
Fountain pen-friendly paper is typically 80gsm or above, smooth enough to let the nib glide, and resistant to feathering (where ink bleeds into the fibres) and ghosting (where text shows through the page).
At Wordsworth & Black, every notebook we craft is designed with exactly these considerations in mind. Your ink should land on the page precisely where you intend it — vivid, sharp, and lasting. The right paper doesn't just support your writing; it elevates it.
The Daily Practice
Building Your Writing Ritual
A fountain pen rewards ritual. Set aside even ten minutes a day — a journal entry, a letter, a to-do list written by hand — and you'll begin to understand why so many people describe the switch as something that changed not just their writing, but their thinking.
Ten minutes a day. That's all it takes to begin
Start small. Keep your pen on your desk, inked and ready. Let it become the first thing you reach for in the morning. Over time, the act of writing becomes less of a task and more of an anchor — a few quiet moments of clarity before the noise of the day begins.
Begin. That's All It Takes.
Your first fountain pen is just that — your first. Most people who start here don't stop. There's a pen for every mood, an ink for every season, a notebook for every chapter of your story.
The best thing you can do is begin.



