Faber-Castell Ambition mechanical pencil (stupid and shiny)

I have to admit, I spend stupid amounts of money on stationary. Fountain pens, mechanical pencils - if its shiny and pretty and cool, I want it. (I can always justify another purchase - sometimes I buy several, so I can give some away.)

So, today I regained the use of my Faber-Castell "Ambition" stainless steel mechanical pencil. The damn thing is too pretty for its own good. It's sleek, it's solid metal (I do like a pencil with some heft in the heat of the writing battle), it's German precision engineering. I'm a sucker for German/Swiss/Austrian(Czech) brands - Rotring, Pelikan, Faber-Castell, Koh-I-Noor, Lamy. Bring them on, I never had a bad experience with any of them (not that I could ever afford a Faber-Castell pen before).

So, yeah. I bought it as a "pick me up" at the pen shop in Heathrow when I flew out to Chicago, and it wasn't THAT expensive. I counted it towards my Christmas presents last year. (Yes, I'm justifying spending a small nation's GDP on what's basically a stupidly pretty mechanical PENCIL).

Anyway, as if to punish me for this act of conspicuous consumption, the bleeding thing broke only after a few months. I didn't actually *do* much to it, I wrote a little with it and otherwise kept it in a leather wallet. Hardly extreme sports in the Sahara fending off a rebel insurgency with just a pen for a weapon to block bullets.

Now what makes that pencil so stylish is that a twist of the cap pushes the mine out. Simple, elegant, genius. Until it breaks. Then the genius design falls flat on its bottom: you can't open the thing, you can't jiggle parts around until they fit and work again.

So I had to hand it in to a specialist pen shop (same chain I bought it from in the first place). They sent it to Germany (I assume changing a small broken spring exceeded any British engineering skills that are left in the country?) - which took eight weeks (they must have shipped it by coughing decrepit donkey mail).

Eight weeks and £10 later (which would have bought me 40 plastic mechanical pencils - enough even for this productive writer to stomach some losses), the pen has returned - that is, I picked it up a few hours ago.

It's sitting right next to me, looking stupidly shiny and elegant again, saying "Trust me. I won't break again. It was probably your own fault anyway. Love me again."

But I feel the shine is off. I don't quite trust it. It's let me down before - it might again. What happens if I'm in the middle of a brilliant sentence and the pen breaks again and I'm losing my train of thought? How can I ever trust you again, Faber-Castell, if I have to keep a 25-cents pencil ready whenever I use the "Ambition" to write a sentence, just in case?
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Published on November 05, 2011 18:52
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message 1: by [deleted user] (new)

It's probably only meant to sit on your desk in a nice holder and look stunning. You are asking too much of beauty. ;)


message 2: by Elin (new)

Elin Stationery. If anyone ever writes m/m with a "stationery kink" theme I'll be at the front of the queue to buy it.

You'd write literachoor with that pencil!


message 3: by Yoshi (new)

Yoshi Kate Mc. wrote: "It's probably only meant to sit on your desk in a nice holder and look stunning. You are asking too much of beauty. ;)"

Agreed! Kate.

This mechanical pencil looks very nice, I want to have it, too!
(I only have a snoopy one :-)

Aleks, mind sharing us pics of your pens & pencils collection?


message 4: by LenaLena (last edited Nov 06, 2011 08:01AM) (new)

LenaLena What, there is no warranty on a pencil that expensive that breaks after only a few months? They actually make you pay another tenner to have it fixed? Shame on them. They have no pride in their product. That is disappointing.


message 5: by [deleted user] (new)

Marleen wrote: "What, there is no warranty on a pencil that expensive that breaks after only a few months? They actually make you pay another tenner to have it fixed? Shame on them. They have no pride in their pro..."

Those of us who buy packages of cheap mechanical pencils at the super market NEVER have these kind of problems. *smirk*


message 6: by LenaLena (new)

LenaLena Hell no. BIC all the way, baby! And there's, like, 6 different colors in each pack!

(Just stay away from the Costco ones, pretty colors, but they suck)


message 7: by Yoshi (new)

Yoshi I have my Snoopy mechanical pencil since almost 15 years, it's still working/writing like a dream.


message 8: by Moekins13 (new)

Moekins13 I am also a stationary addict :). Thank god I am a teacher, I can so justify it! But I must admit my best pens are the 12 for a dollar Bic ones. I make my mom send them all the way to Sweden. One dollar pens. Ten dollars to mail. Yeh.


message 9: by Casey (new)

Casey Cox I have cases of beautiful, shiny, too damned expensive to even consider taking out of the house writing instruments. Writing instruments - because you cannot just call them pens or pencils, they are - as Aleks points out - precision engineering *swoon.

I say too expensive to take out of the house because believe me - when you lose one of the little fuckers, that cost more than the monthly household shop - it really blows a hole in your day. I speak from experience. And it hurts. You have to watch 'em, escape artists that they are. But its better than using a bic in a shop that has been god knows where and used by everyone with god knows what on their hands - eeewwwwww... but yes, I admit, I have a much cheaper but still chic and outstanding in design and brilliance cousin for those very occasions.


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Aleksandr Voinov
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