How wide is too wide?

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What is the common ground when it comes to width of a pen?

This is a very subjective question, but I can at least get a good average. Several of the kit pens (Majestic, Emperor, etc.) are very substantial. I have never taken a reading on them, but they have some meat. For me I like a hefty pen. I am also a little above average in size so for me using a Baron or Jr. is not that comfortable.
 
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jskeen

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well, there is the question of the diameter of the pen body itself, and then the diameter of the section/nib/lower body where you actually hold it. For most ballpoint pens, the size is usually pretty close, but for screw cap pens, there can be a pretty big difference. I find that the larger section of a full size gent is more comfortable than the smaller section of a jr, but I don't necessarily find the larger overall diameter to be a plus. I've been eyeballing Brian's kitless designs very closely because that ratio seems a little smaller. Of course that's all personal and subjective, so you are going to get as many different answers as you do respondents.
 

DurocShark

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Everybody is different, so girth is highly subjective.

I just try to be flexible and offer a range from slims all the way to custom giant grips.
 

Rfturner

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I offer the slimlines up to about the Majestic Jrs, Cigars are among the thicker that I offer. I have always had people commment on how large the Majestic Jr that I keep in my pocket for marketing reasons. Early on I turned an El Grande or something to that nature and it took a very long time to sell about three times the time to sell than a slightly smaller diameter pen
 

cnirenberg

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I'm with Don, it's subjective. I really don't care for the slimline (too thin for my hand), I'm partial to a little "junk in the trunk", that is a bit wider in the body. It is more comfortable and less stress on the hand. (After reading this, you can now take you mind out of the gutter.)
 

Lenny

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I think the general public is conditioned to think that pens should be a certain size. I doubt many of them have ver tried writing with a cigar size pen and if my sales are any indication they probably never will! :biggrin:
 

rsmith

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Again, this is VERY subjective. I offer many different thicknesses, but I offer them by taking into acount WHO I want to market each pen for. If I want the pen to be something that gets used everyday, I will offer a smaller diameter in a simpler shape. If I have a very intricate or rare material, or one with alot of historical significance, nice engraved box, etc...then I tend to market those more toward collectors especially at the higher price point I have them at. These will usually end up on a larger sized pen, usually with a nice fountain nib. The size complements and shows off the material more, not necessarily the components. I don't expect anyone to write on a daily basis with these, and in all reality they will probably end up in a display case or as a nice desk accessory.
I would tend to think that with a lot of the intricate PC work, a number of these tend towards the second example, but it's all subjective:) The most important thing IMO, is that the size of the pen complements the size of any components you choose to use...
 
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