

It’s super fine and smooth nib makes it perfectly fit for that purpose. My little Brown Prera (review forthcoming) is my editing, grading, and marginalia pen. The Broad nib is juicy and smooth which makes writing fun while also forcing me to slow down. It holds over 2ml of ink when I use my Visconti Inkpot (review forthcoming) to fill it. I purchased the 823 (review forthcoming) specifically for use in drafting my long papers, articles, and chapters. The click/retractable nib mechanism makes it perfectly suited for jotting down quick notes in a meeting or when on the go. The VP remains the perfect note-taking pen. I would have never described myself as a Pilot fan, but I guess this makes me one doesn’t it? Until I started this posted I had not realized just how much I use and rely on my Pilot pens. Pens: Pilot VP, Pilot Custom 823, Pilot Prera, TWSBI Diamond 530, Edison Glenmont
INKDROP PLATINUM PREPPY UPDATE
So, it’s time for a bit of an update (OK, more than a bit of an update. In addition, as I get deeper and deeper into my school work, my needs have changed tremendously. Needless to say, my opinions have changed with my collection. That is the list of the items in my accumulation that I could not live without. In February I put up a blog post about my arsenal. You can see the spelling fluctuate in the scans. Sorry for all the “fuchsia” spelling errors.
INKDROP PLATINUM PREPPY FULL
It doesn't get full dark here until well after 10 pm in the summer. Welcome to Seattle, Latitude 47, where on July 4 the day was 1 hour 13 minutes longer, sunrise to sunset, than it was in Virginia. On July 4, the sun set at 8:35 at the Goulets' place it set at 9:11 at our place. Just for fun, I looked up sunset times for where the Goulets live in comparison with where I live.

Playing in the dark is fairly necessary to the game. I've asked friends in this area no one I asked has heard of it either. I've never heard of flashlight tag in my life.

They're in Virginia I live (and grew up) in the Seattle area. The card accompanying the Drop cites a summertime game that Brian and Rachel enjoyed playing as children, called - you guessed it - Flashlight Tag. The Goulet Pens Ink Drop theme for July 2011 is called "Flashlight Tag." It consists of four different specialty inks, a Platinum Preppy highlighter, a plastic squeeze pipette for loading it, and a tiny blacklight flashlight.

It's so true that one's perceptions are colored by one's experiences.
