Wanted to make some fancy pens, so did some simple ones for practice first:
Those are my second, third and fourth ever pens, in that order, they're just normal 7mm slimline pen kits that came in the axminster beginners kit with the mandrel. First one is a segmented blank I made from oak, walnut, some ebony veneer scraps that were in the offcut box, second is padouk and third is an acrylic blank (the Royal Courtship one from Chestnut). I made a litle keyring with the offcut from the last one as an experiment because I got some fancy pen blanks from Feinesholz for the fancy pens and at about a euro per centimeter, I didn't like the idea of discarding any offcuts
First of the fancy pens was actually a pencil, finished that today. Stabilised Karelian birch (stabilised with blue plexiglass hence the colour), finished with micromesh, yorkshire grit and microfine, two coats of melamine from a spraycan, and a single coat of microcrystalline wax.
Looks nicer in the sunshine
Feels good in the hand, already been using it for sketching some ideas, it's quite nice to use.
Next three will be Alpha pen kits from Taylors Mirfield and built as fountain pens, but I need to switch over to a German or French supplier for the next fancy pens - I've been bitten rather badly by VAT/customs/duty fun and games on the last few imports from the UK. A cheap beginners bowl gouge bought on sale from Rutlands so I could try a bottom feeder grind wound up costing as much as a Glenn Lucas gouge sharpened by Glenn himself would have cost me by the time it was all done and the japanese marking knife that was in the box with it when it set out went walkies along the way and I still don't know if it's rattling round the bottom of a UPS van somewhere or if it was confiscated by Customs as a very short katana
Taylors Mirfield only have one reseller here and they don't carry the Alpha kits