Inktend / Ink library / Blue-Black
Lamy
Blue-Black
Blues & navies
Shop Lamy ink ↗Find a sample ↗
Lamy's bottled inks are the standard companion to its Safari and AL-Star pens — reliable, well-behaved, and widely available.
Specs
Color familyBlues & navies
Approx. hex#24405E
SheenNot typically noted
BrandLamy
Own a bottle of Blue-Black?
Track fills, remaining bottle life, and your real paper swatch in Inktend.
Track it →
About Lamy
Founded in Heidelberg in 1930, Lamy became known from the 1960s onward for pairing German industrial design with accessible fountain pens — the Lamy 2000 (1966) and Safari (1980) are two of the most recognized pen silhouettes in the world.
Germany
Founded 1930
See all Lamy products →
Paper & pairing notes
Blues and navies are the most broadly "safe" fountain pen colors — legible, professional, and unlikely to raise eyebrows in an office. This ink will behave predictably on most fountain-pen-friendly paper. Cheap, highly absorbent paper (standard copier paper) will dull any ink's saturation and can cause feathering or bleed-through with wetter nibs.
Storing and using the bottle
Bottled fountain pen ink has an effectively long shelf life when kept capped and out of direct sunlight — most inks remain usable for years. The main risk isn't the ink spoiling, it's a pen sitting inked and unused for weeks: that's what causes clogs, not the ink's age.
Frequently asked questions
What color family is Blue-Black?
Blue-Black falls into Inktend's blues & navies family based on its typical swatch color.
Does Blue-Black have sheen?
Blue-Black is not typically noted for sheen. If you want that effect, browse similarly colored inks tagged with sheen in the ink library.
How should I store a bottle of Blue-Black?
Bottled fountain pen ink has an effectively long shelf life when kept capped and out of direct sunlight — most inks remain usable for years. The main risk isn't the ink spoiling, it's a pen sitting inked and unused for weeks: that's what causes clogs, not the ink's age.
What paper works best with Blue-Black?
Blues and navies are the most broadly "safe" fountain pen colors — legible, professional, and unlikely to raise eyebrows in an office. This ink will behave predictably on most fountain-pen-friendly paper. Cheap, highly absorbent paper (standard copier paper) will dull any ink's saturation and can cause feathering or bleed-through with wetter nibs.
Similar shades
Color shown is a close digital approximation of a typical swatch, not a calibrated color match.