
The joy of pen-enabling good friends
Two of my best friends have just begun exploring fountain pens. Gian just bought his first TWSBI ECO. The ECO is a great pen. For a smallish investment, you get a piston-filler (holds 2.5 ml of ink), a demonstrator (your pen becomes the color of your ink), and a reliable writer (all of my TWSBI nibs write true to size). He ordered an EF nib, for he is a man of taste and sophistication.
And then he dropped his ECO. Nib down. Ouch.

Going greyscale for everyday writing
My most frequent writing tasks are updating my weekly task list, processing lesson plans, and note taking during meetings. Weeklies are made all in grey ink. But notes and process writing are bicolor: a grey ink for information, and an accent color for new tasks and commentary.

Introducing my analog teaching kit
Wintry weather kept my school virtual all but one day this week. I leveraged the extra time at home to transition out of my first bullet journal of the academic year. The Hobonichi Plain Notebook housed six months of planning, lesson plans, meeting notes, lecture notes and the like.

Inking three long-ignored pens
I asked my spouse to suggest a name for my color palette this week. They said, “clouds or something stormy.” I can see where the palette evokes clouds and storms. We’re going with ‘seafoam storm.’ For the first time in a while, I have only one earth tone inked. Cool blues and purples take the day.