Tag Archives: MUJI

MUJI Fountain Pen–Long Term Review

After over eight months of fairly regular use, I’m still not completely sure what I think about the MUJI Fountain Pen. But I mostly like it. Mostly.

The outside of the MUJI Fountain Pen.

The outside of the MUJI Fountain Pen.

I don’t like the sandblasted texture, which feels a bit like scratching your fingers across a chalkboard the first time you touch it. However, the texture does a great job of hiding finger prints and absorbing dings and scratches.

The tiny clip on the tiny cap looks like a joke, but it’s tight and fits most shirt pockets (if you’re a men’s L or XL anyway) but the pen is long enough that the small clip causes the bottom to swing around too much.

I don’t like the rubberized finials as they only seem to get dark and dingy looking.

Pulling the cap on and off is annoying and, at first, gives you more of that fingernails on a chalkboard feeling. On the other hand, once it’s posted, it’s secure and won’t fall out.

The tube-in-a-tube design is very strange, but it does keep the fingers away from the nib, although it forces you to keep your fingers back farther than you may find comfortable.

Close up of the tube-in-a-tube design and the knurling.

Close up of the tube-in-a-tube design, the Schmidt nib, and the knurling.

The knurling is slippery at first, which is odd, but I’ve gotten used to it.

In the end, what sells this pen is the Schmidt nib. It’s smooth and just wet enough that it can leave impressive marks on student exams without bleeding through the paper. I’ve marked hundreds of exams and essays with it and always miss it when I’m forced to use something else. It could just be that I like Parker Quink red ink, which is dark and not pink like a lot of other reds, or that I just like the notion of marking exams with a fountain pen.

The nib does seem a bit small and out of proportion with the rest of the pen, but it’s one of the best writers I have. I even forgive it being slightly too narrow.

Also, after months of regular use, all the parts still seem as tight as when they were new. There’s been some finish wear around the bottom of the cap, but that’s out of sight most of the time.

I’ll keep using the pen, and I recommended people try it. I can’t recommend it as a first fountain pen, but it is worth getting, along with a converter, for people ready to make the leap to bottled ink. The tube-in-a-tube design also lets people fill it without worrying about having to grip the inky part.

MUJI Passport Memo Notepads–End of Books Review

One of the dangers of living in Japan, at least if you love pens and stationery, is that everywhere you go, there’s a shop full of stuff you didn’t know you needed, but suddenly can’t live with out. Because that is how I felt about She Who Must Be Obeyed, I feel that buying things from these shops expresses my love for her.

Something like that.

One of the more dangerous stores is MUJI (which is the no-brand “brand” in the same way Naomi Klein is the no-logo “brand”) which is an eclectic shop that features a mix of electronics, fashion, furniture, food, and stationery. Its stationery section is usually small, but they like to sell odd things you can’t find other places.

One time I stopped by “simply out of curiosity” I found three small notebooks for about a dollar each that I couldn’t resist. They were the Passport Memo (パスポートメモ) Notepads.

The three Passport Notepad colors.

The three Passport Notepad colors. Blue is dot grid; green is graph; red is blank.

They are the same size as US passports and come in three colors with off-white paper in three different patterns. Blue has a dot grid; green has graph paper; and red has blank pages. They easily fit in a Midori Traveler’s Passport sized notebook cover. The cover says they have 24 pages, but if you count front and back, they have 48 pages.

The three different paper styles.

The three different paper styles.

The covers are reasonably sturdy card stock and have a thin plastic coating that holds up well to being carried in pockets.

The paper (which is described as “recycled paper more than 10%”) is good but not particularly fountain pen friendly. It reminded me a lot of Moleskine paper but for a much smaller price. It had a lot of ghosting and wetter nibs had a lot of bleed through and spotting. I also found that, although there wasn’t much feathering, everything I wrote looked a bit rough around the edges, especially with wet nibs. That said, I didn’t mind using them and managed to use every page front and back with little trouble.

I wouldn’t mind picking up some more, and would recommend them to people looking for a useful, small notebook. Unfortunately I have several other notebooks to try.