Reddit Reddit reviews Antique Feather Copper Pen Stem Metal Nibbed Pen Writing Quill LL-14

We found 2 Reddit comments about Antique Feather Copper Pen Stem Metal Nibbed Pen Writing Quill LL-14. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Office & School Supplies
Writing Supplies & Correction Supplies
Pens & Pen Refills
Calligraphy Pens
Office Products
Antique Feather Copper Pen Stem Metal Nibbed Pen Writing Quill LL-14
CALLIGRAPHY PEN SET: The Feather Dip Pen, Six different nibs, 1 Bottle ink, 1 pen holder ,1 sealing wax,can be used to write different size words. it is a very popular item which is sure meet your shopping requirements.SMOOTH &COMFORT: Our feather dip pens provide superior control and stability delivering smoothness and an easy ink flow. The long well-balanced pen body provides a comfortable writing experience.100% HANDCRAFTED: GC artist grade Calligraphy Pen Set is made by hand with luxury rosewood and stainless steel nib, pioneering new writing tools and high technology. The traditional crafted product.MANIZATION DESIGN:This traditional set blends a centuries-old art form with your unique 'hand' for a creation conveyed in thought and design. GC dip pens provide superior control and stability delivering smoothness and an easy ink flow. The pen design allows fool-proof writing helping you hit that sweet spot with ease. The long well-balanced pen body provides a comfortable writing experience. 6 reservoir nibs allows for easy cleaning.PREMIUM ARTISAN GIFT SET - Nice quill set will blow your mind with its exceptional design and craftsmanship. Every gift box includes a handmade and hence unique owl feather quill with a metal nib, pen holder, 6 calligraphy tips and a 20cc ink bottle.
Check price on Amazon

2 Reddit comments about Antique Feather Copper Pen Stem Metal Nibbed Pen Writing Quill LL-14:

u/LordOfTongs · 2 pointsr/skyrim

Boy am I glad you asked.

install the following mods

--requiem

--no gps //works-ish

--frostfall

--hunterborn

--immersiveFP

--realistic needs and diseases

--wet and cold

--animations

--better quest objectives

--enhanced character edit

--climates of tamriel

--hothtropper's armor pack

--Better Fast Travel

Then disable
compass -- bShowCompass=0
crosshairs -- bCrosshairEnabled=0
floating quest objectives -- bShowFloatingQuestMarkers=0

in your SkyrimPrefs.init (typically in documents/my games/skyrim)

Turn off all in game music. (in game->esc->settings->audio)

Download this image
Go to office depot or somewhere and have it printed. On a giant piece of paper.
Get a quill
Get an other weathered looking journal




Start a new game.

AS SOON AS YOU LEAVE THE CAVE, you'll be told to go to river wood/dragons reach. DONT GO!

Open your journal and disable the main story quest. Instead of turning right and traveling downstream, turn left.

Requiem makes things super friggin hard, mostly because enemies are NOT set to your level. A werewolf is a werewolf, even at level 1, so you can definitely find yourself in an un-winnable fight. Setting the difficulty to easy doesn't do anything.

So if you want a more relaxing experience, try this.

Pick three skills, say one-handed, illusion, and speech craft. (Try to pick three or four unrelated skills to make things interesting. Weapons, magic, non-combat is usually pretty fun). Open the console and type

"Player.advskill illusion 1000"

"Player.advskill speech craft 1000"

"Player.advskill one-handed 1000"


Until you've reached say level 15. Level up and pick your perks. Regardless of what you picked, get the first perk in the lock-picking and speech craft skill tree. Without them, you'll get really raw deals at shop AND you won't be able to pick locks. Like, any lock. Ever.



And here are your game play rules.

--Don't use your quest log (j), write things down IRL.

--Don't look at your in-game world or local map. Use your printed map.

--Take notes. Potion recipes, ingredient locations, enemy weaknesses.


You can get surprisingly far without being told where to go and what to do. Quest dialogue and journals are usually descriptive enough, but you have to pay actual attention. If you see a dead adventurer and find a journal or book on him, read it. 100% of it. Even if it's not a quest starter, take notes. You'd be surprised how big and connected the skyrim world is. If you play to win, you'll glance over the depth of the world. Sure, you can beat the game is like, 6 hours if you fast travel and glitch your way through fights on easy. But why would you want to?

u/possibleanswer · 1 pointr/todayilearned

Quill pens still exist, and they're still used by many people. Checking on Amazon, I see 5504 results for the query "Quill Pen"-and one has 175 reviews. Are they less common than regular pens? Of course. Would it be unusual to see one in someone's home? Absolutely. But it wouldn't be in the realm of the unreal (sorry, couldn't resist).

Typewriters existed in the 1960's, and many people used them. Typing was often seen as women's work though, and it was considered a specialized skill, many people (mostly women) being hired solely to transcribe manuscript into type. I know many people who were alive at the time who'd confirm this. A seventy year old non college educated janitor using one would have been seen as unusual in the 1960's (though not as unusual as a janitor writing a 15,145 page fantasy manuscript).

Would it have been as strange as seeing someone with a quill pen today? I don't know, that would be a matter of individual opinion. The answer would change depending on who you asked. But as both would be uncommon, it's not an unfair analogy. A bit exaggerated? Perhaps-but most analogies are.