

💎 Elevate your writing game with colors as bold as your ambition!
The Pelikan Edelstein 8-Bottle Ink Set offers eight 50ml bottles of premium, jewel-inspired fountain pen inks made in Germany. Featuring a special ingredient for smooth ink flow and reduced pen maintenance, these vibrant inks combine luxury aesthetics with professional-grade performance, perfect for millennial managers who value both style and substance in their writing tools.
| ASIN | B004DK5WW4 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #77,074 in Office Products ( See Top 100 in Office Products ) #88 in Bottled Pen Ink |
| Brand | Pelikan |
| Color | Assorted Colors |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars (2,257) |
| Date First Available | November 23, 2010 |
| Ink Color | Blue |
| Item Weight | 5.05 pounds |
| Item model number | 670802 |
| Manufacturer | Chartpak Inc. |
| Manufacturer Part Number | 670802 |
| Material Type | Ink |
| Number of Items | 1 |
| Product Dimensions | 8 x 9.25 x 4.25 inches |
| Size | 1.7 fl oz |
C**.
Great blue ink at a good price, spectacular bottle, great seller.
These German sellers of Edelstein are lifesavers. Pelkikan Edelstein ink is spectacular, but insultingly overpriced in America. For $30, this ink is forgettable. For under $20, this stuff is a rocking deal. The bottles are awesome (not the most practical, but far from the worst, and they look amazing on any desk, with jewel like glass and a beautiful cap) And the ink is just stellar. Medium flowing, medium-high saturation, some red sheen (reviewing Topaz) decent manners on bad paper, well behaved on good paper, decent dry times, it's just a lovely color in a lovely bottle. Shipping was exceptionally fast for international (less than a week for every bottle I've ordered from a german seller) and I just can't find a reason to suggest you don't buy a bottle. Some of the colors can be a little underwhelming, but Topaz is definitely one of the more exciting colors. Not much water resistance though. If you can find a bottle of Smoky Quartz for this price, jump all over it. THAT stuff is something special.
G**H
These colors and inks are great.
One of my favorite inks. I've got the emerald, which is great on St. Patricks day. Lubricity is just right, the ink rarely dries out, even if pen is unused for over a week. Quality of all Pelikan ink is outstanding. I also have the Sapphire for everyday.
A**O
My "Holy Grail" Blue Ink
Since the pictures on Amazon don't include any photos of the color itself, this is an absolutely gorgeous, stunning bright vibrant cerulean blue. It's bluer and darker than a cyan, but not quite as dark as a standard formal blue. I have a ridiculous number of blue inks that pretty much span the spectrum of shades, and I don't have anything even a little bit like this. I am a true connoisseur of inks, and especially blue inks since I have to use them for work. I thought I'd tried them all - everything from the most expensive of Japanese inks to the cheapest brand X standards. This beautiful blue excels in every category - I've used it extensively on both Rhodia and Moleskine paper, and it doesn't bleed or feather through either, even in my wettest pen. Dry time is excellent as well. OK enough with the boring stuff, let's get on to what you really buy an ink for: the sheer beauty of it! I am in love with inks that shade, and oh my goodness the shading on this is even better than my previous favorite Kensington Blue. Oh the shading. Even in a stiff, cheap converted Preppy, this ink gives amazing shading. Overall, I can't recommend this enough - worth every penny for a dazzling, unique blue ink of outstanding quality.
S**R
Best ink I've used!
Ink was very fluid and smooth, one of my favorite colors from this collection. Very good quality ink, plus the easy close screw on cap keeps the ink safe.
V**D
Vibrant color and smooth writing
The color is fantastic, viscous texture, yet no clogging. Great quality glass vial if you care about this.
D**R
Gorgeous color, solid performance
I bought this ink for its beautiful color — it's suitable for work, but still distinctive. I've been impressed with its consistent performance in all of my pens: It flows nicely and creates lovely shading without being too wet. It dries pretty quickly too and does okay even on cheap copier paper (some bleeding, but not terrible). Like most blues and dye-based inks, it's not very water resistant. But that's about the only caveat i can think of. It's a great value considering the large size of the bottle, and i won't hesitate to buy it again.
F**D
Pretty & I love it!
Lovely ink. Writes well. The right amount of wet/dry. Currently using it in both a platinum curidas (f) & a pelican twist (m) & it writes well in both. Beautiful color & flows nicely. It has not clogged up my nibs.
K**A
Good but not a replacement for Blue-Black
I bought a bottle of Pelikan Edelstein Tanzanite along with a few colors from other manufacturers in an attempt to replace the original Pelikan Blue-Black. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration banned the import of Pelican Blue-Black in 2011 citing a key ingredient, dihydrogen monoxide (DHMO). Apparently this is in all iron gall inks, and Lamy and Montblanc inks with this ingredient have also been banned. The two key issues in comparing the new Edelstein and the old Blue-Black are color and ink flow. First color. Pelikan Blue-Black was a neutral medium-dark gray ink with a bluish hue. The overall impression was of grey first and then blue. Compared to Parker Quink blue-black it wasn't blue at all. I think both inks were classic colors, Quink for letter writing from the 1950s and 1960s, Pelikan for diary entries and sketches going back to the 1920s. Tanzanite is neither as neutral as the old blue-black nor as blue as the Quink. Tanzanite is definitely a blue ink, best suited for letter writing or for use in a nice broad signature pen. It is a bold color, much darker than the old blue-black, and the blue hue shades a little toward red. Don't worry, it is nowhere near purple. Ink flow. Regular users of Pelikan inks know that they tend to be quite dry in relation to other manufacturers' inks. This is a matter of both personal taste and the age and type of nib used. I use pens dating from brand new back to the early 1910s, and certain pens in my collection dry up quickly when I put Pelikan inks in them. With their new Edelstein inks, Pelikan has included a very effective lubricant. In pens with very dry-writing nibs it allows writing without drying out or scratching. In pens with fast flowing nibs it does not increase the flow to the extent that a fine point suddenly writes like a broad. I have no idea how they accomplished it but I think this is the genius of the entire Edelstein line. To sum up: Pelikan has come out with a new line of well-designed inks. As befitting new inks, none (except for Onyx, black) is the same color as a previous Pelikan ink. Working under constraints put on them by the federal government, Pelikan had to drop their iron-gall based blue-black ink entirely. Pelikan has engineered a new lubricant which allows scratchy pens to write well while not increasing the flow of wet-writing pens. All in all I think the Pelikan Edelstein range is a good new product line, and Tanzanite is a good color. Remember, Guenther Wagner started Pelikan as an ink company in the 19th century, so it is good to see they are still innovating. My one wish is that they come out with a 1-ounce bottle in the new design.
P**E
Encre fluide, noire, classique mais efficace
M**N
Super
R**S
Tinta Pelikan de la gama Edelstein. Viene presentada en precioso bote de cristal que luce estupendamente en el escritorio. La cantidad de tinta es de 50 ml. El color es un azul-celeste. La descripción de Amazon no es correcta, ya que habla de 'violet-Blue'. Esta descripción corresponde a la Edelstein Sapphire que si tiene tono azul violáceo. En cambio, la Topaz, no tiene nada de tono violáceo. El color tiende más al turquesa que al violeta. Es verdad que suele ser un azul bastante claro, aunque eso depende del tipo de papel que uses y de si tu plumin se mueve más por el registro 'seco' (poco flujo de tinta) o 'húmedo' (entrega gran flujo de tinta). En plumines secos tenderà más al celeste-turquesa, y en plumines húmedos el color será más oscuro pero siempre dentro de la gama de los azules claros. El desempeño de la tinta es fantástico. Gran lubricación, lo que hace que el plumin deslice de forma suave por el papel. Gran saturación. Color vibrante. Bastante sombreado (shading). Es decir, que en el trazo podrás apreciar variaciones en la claridad-oscuridad del color. Esta es una cualidad bastante apreciada entre los aficionados a las estilográficas, aunque las personas (como mi señora) que prefieren trazos más homogéneos en cuanto al color la apreciarán menos. Posiblemente no sea el color que utilizaría para firmar una escritura si fuera notario, pero para eso los aficionados a las plumas tenemos más de una estilográfica y más de una tinta en nuestro escritorio.
S**A
Very nice worthy but expensive!
H**Z
Excellent
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