Skip to content
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
Search
Close

L.T. Hanlon

Tag: Pilot FriXion

‘Mission: Impossible’ office supplies

June 30, 2019June 30, 2019 L.T. Hanlon1 Comment

Photo of a typewritten page with the following text. Sunday, June 30, 2019. Chicago, USA. Selecting mission specialists. As a kid, one of my favorite TV series was the original Mission: Impossible. I always enjoyed the ritual introduction that included Briggs or Phelps learning of the mission and then choosing his team members. With some notable exceptions they generally selected the same folks. I've always assumed that the photos of those not chosen were in-jokes. I have a similar approach in mind when I buy office supplies, and often ask myself how a pen, pencil, eraser, or other implement will complement my analog outlook and typewriter collection. One relatively recent addition to my IMF team is the Pilot FriXion erasable pen. It works almost like something Barney Collier would come up with. FriXion pens use a special, heat-sensitive ink that can be easily quote erased unquote when rubbed with its dedicated eraser. I placed erase in quotes because the ink doesn't exactly go anywhere. It's still there and, when exposed to a cold environment like in the freezer will return to visibility. This also means that if you leave paper with writing from such a pen in, say, a locked car on a hot day, your class notes could vanish. But only until you toss that notebook in the freezer. Rocketbook makes several notebooks that expand upon this capability magnificently. The company's Wave notebook is erased by putting it in a microwave oven. Its Everlast notebook employs a specially coated paper (or plastic; I’m not exactly sure what it's made of) that allows FriXion ink to be wiped off with a damp microfiber cloth. I used both kinds of notebooks and am pleased with how they work. FriXion pens also perform excellently on regular paper.

JetPens explains how Pilot FriXion pens work. These folks are a great resource for pens, paper, notebooks, and more. You should also give Rocketbook notebooks a try.

Share this:

  • Tweet
  • Print
  • Email

Like this:

Like Loading...
Follow L.T. Hanlon on WordPress.com

It’s a big, wide wonderful world

I fully accept Charles Fort’s observation that one measures a circle beginning anywhere.

Ancient Egypt Canon Typestar 5 Cattle Mutilations Chicago Consumer Products Country Music Everything Fortean Phenomena Hermes 3000 Kindle Direct Publishing Marketing, &c Meteorology Movies, TV, Effluvia Newspapers Office Supplies Olympia SM7 Photography Printed Ephemera Publishing Railroads Science Fiction Shortwave Radio Smith-Corona Silent-Super Social Media Stormchasing Technology Travel Typewriters UFOs Unsolved Mysteries

Blogroll

  • Antique Typewriter Collecting by Tony Casillo
  • Codes of the West
  • J. Allen Hynek Center for UFO Studies
  • Jeff Rense
  • Joe Van Cleave
  • Library of Congress — Photos
  • Poems While You Wait
  • Spudart
  • The Classic Typewriter Page
  • The Rt. Rev. Theodore Munk
  • The Untimely Typewriter
  • Typewriter Review

My Flickr Photos

000231320010 copy000231320008 copy000231320003 copy000231320005 copy000231320006 copy000231320001 copy000231300009 copy000231300006+5 Anaglyph000231300002+1 Anaglyph
More Photos
Create a website or blog at WordPress.com
Back to top
  • Follow Following
    • L.T. Hanlon
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • L.T. Hanlon
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...
 

    loading Cancel
    Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
    Email check failed, please try again
    Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.
    %d bloggers like this: