Inktend / Ink library / Pigment Blue
Platinum
Pigment Blue
Blues & navies
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A Japanese brand whose Classic ink line is designed to resist clogging, pairing naturally with Platinum's slip-and-seal pens.
Specs
Color familyBlues & navies
Approx. hex#1F4E9E
SheenNot typically noted
BrandPlatinum
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About Platinum
Founded in Tokyo in 1919, Platinum is one of Japan's "big three" pen makers, best known for the slip-and-seal cap technology that keeps a pen from drying out for months.
Japan
Founded 1919
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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 Pigment Blue?
Pigment Blue falls into Inktend's blues & navies family based on its typical swatch color.
Does Pigment Blue have sheen?
Pigment Blue 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 Pigment Blue?
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 Pigment Blue?
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.