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Best Pens For Left Handed People

by TonyB on September 2, 2009

Left handed pen

Lefties, we know you have it rough when it comes to finding good pens, since most of them are designed to be used by right-handers.

A typical right-handed person using a pen pulls it toward the right in a smooth motion, leaving a line of fresh ink untouched behind the writing hand.

A left-handed person has to push the pen from left to right. That requires the writer to press harder on the pen, which can be uncomfortable and can force the paper to foul the writing tip. Meanwhile, the writing hand drags over the ink and smudges it.

Obviously, then, the two most important qualities in a pen for left-handed people is that the ink dries quickly and that it flows as smoothly as possible. With that in mind, these are some of the pens left-handers might consider:

Sharpie Pen – Several left-handed readers over at the excellent Pen Addict blog reported that they’ve had good experiences with the Sharpie. It has a plastic tip that lays down a smooth, even line of quick-drying ink that, according to the maker, won’t bleed through most papers. Although the pen isn’t specifically designed for lefties, the smudge-resistant ink at least will help you avoid those annoying smears.

Uni-ball Jetstream – A rollerball pen might not be the first choice for a lefty because the ink can smudge if your hand passes over it as you write. However, that’s the main selling point of the Jetstream: It’s a hybrid that combines the fast drying ink more common to a ballpoint with the gentle glide of a gel. You get fewer smudges and a more comfortable experience.

Fisher Space Pen – Actually, any quality pen with a pressurized cartridge can be a good choice for left-handed people, including the Uni-ball Power Tank or the Inka Pen. The advantage is that since there’s always downward pressure on the ink, you’ll get a constant smooth flow, whether you’re pushing the pen across the paper or pulling it. You won’t be rubbing the ink off the ball, “drying up” the pen, as sometimes happens when lefties use ballpoints. And the pen will even write upside down. How cool is that?

STABILO ’s move easy – This rollerball pen is designed for kids, but there’s no reason adults can’t use it also. What’s important is that STABILO makes a left-handed version of the pen that is molded with grip recesses so that your thumb and finger fit comfortably without any odd contortions. The idea is that you can hold it with a light grip, and it still will move easily across the paper. Available in .5mm and .3 mm. The smaller size is recommended for faster drying. Usually ships with blue ink, although you can order black ink refills.

Yoropen – The advantage of this ballpoint pen is that it’s adjustable to fit whatever position is comfortable for you. Just rotate the tripod grip to the left, and the angled design is supposed to allow you to relax your fingers and give you a better view of what you’re writing so you don’t smudge the fresh ink. You can get the refillable Executive (a bit pricey at more than £30) or inexpensive disposables.

Pelikan Pelikano Junior – There’s much discussion online about whether left-handed people can use fountain pens. Some lefties say they’ve tried and found it impossible, while others swear they’ve been comfortably using fountain pens for years. The general consensus seems to be that it’s difficult because the left-to-right upward motion distorts the tines of most pens. However, the Pelikano Junior, another pen for children that also works for adults, comes in a version specifically for left-handers. The two key features are a slightly rotated grip (nice but not all that useful) and a ball at the tip of the nib that keeps the pen moving smoothly over the paper, even when pushed left to right. This pen tends to write wet so you might want to try one of the optional fine nibs.

Of course, these are only a few of the pens available to left-handed people. We’d like to hear about your experiences with pens for lefties. Have any favourites that have worked for you, or any that you’ve tried and know just don’t do the job? Let us know.

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Tank vs Fisher

OK, credit where it’s due: The Fisher Space Pen was one of those brilliant little byproducts of the American space program like Tang and cordless drills. With its pressurized ink cartridge that could write on any surface from any angle, it did for ballpoint pens what the iPhone did for cell phones.

But that was more than 40 years ago.

The Fisher Space Pen is no longer the only ballpoint capable of functioning under less-than-ideal conditions. A number of other pens also can make that claim, chief among them the handy Uni-ball Power Tank RT that writes a neat, clean .4mm line.

Is it a better choice than the Fisher? We think so.

First, a little background for those who aren’t familiar with the Fisher.

NASA was trying to find a reliable writing instrument for astronauts in the early ’60s. Ballpoint pens would not work because they relied on gravity to feed ink to the ball and then onto paper. Pencils were encased in wood, which was flammable, a dangerous potential in space. NASA tried buying mechanical pencils, but ended up paying $142 each, which did not sit well with the public.

Paul Fisher already had succeeded in inventing a universal ballpoint pen refill that fit most of the popular brands then on the market. He went to work on a pen that would perform in the unique conditions of space. That meant it had to function by some means other than gravity and had to withstand extremes of heat and cold.

His company reportedly spent $1 million on research, and the result was the Space Pen. By adding gas pressure to the cartridge and using low-viscosity ink, Fisher created a pen that could write underwater, in zero gravity, and in temperature ranges from -45C to 204C.

NASA scientists put the pens through testing and, in 1967, agreed to buy 100 of them for the Apollo space mission.

With that purchase, Fisher pens became famous. He began selling them to the public, and they were immensely popular. The pens were the first product ever sold from space – via QVC – and became the subject of a Seinfeld episode. Although Fisher died in 2006, his company continues and offers a whole range of space pens.

And no doubt about it, they’re neat pens. Take a look at this video of a reviewer using it to write underwater.

But the Power Tank by Uni-ball also has a pressurized ink cartridge and is capable of writing on wet or dry surfaces and from any angle, including upside down. It, too, is resistant to temperature extremes and perform well under adverse conditions. This pen, as well, uses low-viscosity Uni Super Ink (which is waterproof and fade- and tamper-resistant.) And, while Uni-ball makes no claim the pens can write underwater, there doesn’t seem to be any reason they shouldn’t.

The OfficeSupplyGeek wrote an outstanding review of the Power Tank last year. He found that the pen wrote equally well right-side up, upside down and at low temperatures. He even conducted an experiment that involved putting the pen in a tube of water, freezing it and then seeing how well it would write. Frozen, the pen managed to write about as well as it had at room temperature.

Reviewers on Amazon.com also give the pen high marks for performance, including this one:

These are great all-weather pens. I use them at home and work, but I initially got them for geocaching. I needed something that could withstand cold temperatures as well as wet conditions. The old “space” pens came to mind, but they had lots of problems and were clunky. These seemed to have fixed all those problems. My pen works when other pens, and even pencils, have failed. Oh, yeah, they do write upside down and for long periods when writing on a pad against a wall (i.e., vertically).

Of course, the Power Tanks don’t have sleek metal bodies and aren’t precision machined like the Fishers. Instead, the retractable pens are made of tough plastic, have comfortable rubber grips and are translucent so you can gauge when you need a refill.

But you want to know the main difference in the pens? Cost.

You’ll spend almost £20 for a Fisher Space Pen. A Power Tank will cost you less than £2.

There may be something to owning a pen with the storied history of the Fisher. And the pens do look good, especially the original astronaut pen and the bullet pen, which fits as neatly into a pants pocket as any pen could. Is that worth the extra money, though?

Not really, especially given how often people lose their pens. Most of us just want a good, reliable pen that fits well in our hands and will do its job even in difficult conditions. If it’s got a little style, all the better. The Power Tank does everything we want it to do, for about a tenth of the price.

You just can’t beat that.

What do you think, readers?

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