HEROIN IS A DRUG TO MAKE THE WORLD GO AWAY

THIS IS A BLOG ABOUT A LIFE WITHOUT HEROIN



Monday 18 November 2013

Calligraphic Black

I'VE BEEN LOOKING for the "blackest fountain pen ink". There are pages and pages of online reviews for brands not available in London. Who are Noodlers? Should I have heard of them? I've never seen their products anywhere...
The standard ink here in the UK would be Parker Quink. But it's nowhere near dark enough. They should call it Quink Dark Grey. I used to use this stuff called Higgins Eternal, but it's eternally even lighter mid-grey than Quink, and certainly not proper black.
The one I'm using now is called Lamy black, but it's still too washy for my exacting taste. I want my writing/artwork to look "like a void in the universe" as someone else put it.
Why is it that rollerball and gel ink pens write so much darker? Is it that because for a throw-away pen they can use a more intense formulation that would clog a fountain pen over time? Who knows. Actually, does anyone really care?
WELL ANYWAY, I'm learning (my own style of) calligraphy, you see. Very slowly. I mean, I  wish I could be as artistic as this (I'm getting in this direction):
or even this (by JRR Tolkien):

But I'm not quite there yet. One day soon I want to learn "real" calligraphy. Did you know you can get work calligraphing lawyers' deeds? I'm serious. For that I'm gonna need really ultra-black lawyerly cosmic ink, y'know the type fraudsters cannot wash off. I used to have an india ink pen, which was really for doodling and drawing, not writing: that produced fantastically black scribbles, but I heard you can literally wipe it clean from parchment and vellum. Not very fraud-proof! Is that true?

I'd also like to learn Japanese and Chinese calligraphy. When my set of TEN books is finished (not just one book ~ ten) and I've got paid however much you get for writing bestsellers these days, then I intend to invest in the Rosetta Stone Japanese course, but you'd need to write a bestseller or ten to afford it. The complete course costs £279 ($449.35)

VIDEO: ISN'T THIS FANTASTIC?
BARBER'S ADAGIO FOR STRINGS
SUNG BY THE CHOIR OF TRINITY COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE
VISUALS BY NASA
DEBS THIS IS FOR YOU


O, and last but not least; THIS is what a real Tolkien manuscript looks like (the one on Saturday's post was by God knows who, but it wasn't JRR Tolkien!)
Isn't it beautiful.
Ukh and that's another thing. I have to learn how to do proper pen-&-ink drawings to illustrate all TEN VOLUMES of my kiddies' book. If I end up publishing it myself. Even if I do get a real publisher, I want them to agree to let me print up limited fine editions myself. So I'm STILL going to have to learn to draw. Wish me luck because I only have a talent for abstract art, not the real stuff. (I would be make a good interior designer of mosques.)


Illustrated: Noodler's ink bottle by Geeky Girl at her blog; homespun calligraphy in black Quink; dwarfish runes on MS by Tolkien, another Tolkien manuscript; mosque design...

8 comments:

Mrs Crawford said...

Oh hello my dear I came upon your post quite by accident in pursuit of a knitting and crochet page. How very interesting. Are you still on heroin then? Do you write calligraphically every day? Are you mad?

Akelamalu said...

I absolutely L.O.V.E. the smell of ink!

lucky said...

Indian ink is what you want - and yes you are mad, delusinal at the very least

Gattina said...

It has been a long time I haven't been here ! I scrolled a little through your blog and notice with pleasure that you seem to be far better ! it's just nice to have a target in life ! I wish you a lot of success with your book !

Welshcakes Limoncello said...

Wow - excellent project, Gleds. x

Gledwood said...

Doesn't Quink smell delicious!!

Gledwood said...

How typical. I reply to comments before the unmoderated ones appear, making me look like I'm f-ing most of my commenters off.

Lucky how am I delusional??:!

Welshcakes: hey I FOUND a nearly empty bottle of Limoncello at our local bus stop. Twas lovely (I couldn't resist tasting the remnants,. how scummy of me I know!)

+ Gattina thank you very much. I just don't know how to publish the damn thing now!! It's been such a chore photocopying the bloody thing at the library...

Gledwood said...

Yeah India black ink. I used to use that. Had a special fountain pen, with scraper, that you took the nib apart and scraped the gummy residue off. The Lamy black I'm using at the moment looks ALMOST that black, if you keep squeezing ink through the nib every couple of paragraphs. It looks lovely. Which is why I hate ink cartridges. You can't squeeze them easily to make the ink really splurge out. Which is how I like to write. Crazed, maybe. But delusional??? Huh=ho? O no!