Lamy Safari featured

Lamy Safari Fountain Pen Review

31 October 2016 By ian

This site is over three years old and I’ve not reviewed the Lamy Safari until now. How can that be? Perhaps because it’s never been new: the Safari was the first fountain pen I bought as a proper grown up. (Also the first, and so far only, fountain pen I lost.) If you live in western Europe then they’re almost ubiquitous, too. Most high street stationers, and many newsagents, will stock a few Safaris. Ubiquity doesn’t equate to quality, of course. If it did we’d all be using biros. Is the fountain pen world benefitting from the Safari being so many people’s first pen? Should it be in your collection? Should you recommend it to a friend? Let’s see!

Price: from about £14 (UK) or $30 (USA)
Nib options: stainless steel: extra-fine, fine, medium, broad, or left-handed (but see below)
Barrel options: black, red, yellow, blue, pink, white, green plus many special editions (at extra cost) such as the coral pink version I’m reviewing here
Filling system: proprietary cartridge/converter
Size: 14.0cm long closed, 1.2cm diameter (barrel)
Weight: 17g

Lamy Safari review

As standard, the Safari’s available with the usual range of steel nibs, including a left-handed one. Being right-handed I can’t comment on the left-handed nib but a few left-handed people have told me that having adapted their writing to accommodate the usual style of nib, the left-handed one causes them difficulties. If you pick a Safari up in a high street shop you’ll probably have to buy it with a medium nib. You can also buy replacement nibs very cheaply and these come in a few more sizes: 1.1mm, 1.5mm and 1.9mm italics as well as an ‘A’ nib, which is meant for beginners and is like an extra round medium. Many of these nibs are available with a black rather than chrome finish. You can also buy gold nibs that will fit, and are wonderful, but will cost you around four times as much as the pen itself (in the UK).

Lamy’s steel nibs tend to be pretty good. There’s the occasional rogue but on the whole they’re smooth and have good flow. They aren’t exceptional but they are plenty good enough. What this means if you have a Lamy pen you can, for not too much money, try a wide variety of nibs to see which widths suit you best, or use the same pen for everything from making small notes in a margin to calligraphy. The nibs simply slide on and off so you can even change them without having to clean the pen (if you don’t mind inky fingers).

Lamy Safari branding

As well as a wide variety of standard colours Lamy produce a special edition each year, with a matching ink. This coral pink pen was one such. These special editions can sometimes fetch quite a premium but it means you can probably find a colour you can love (especially if you love green).

Lamy Safari posted

The barrels are plastic but even if the colour is, say, black, the Safari feels like a cheerful pen. If you have a one in a bright colour then it just fills you with joy. I much prefer the Safari to the more expensive aluminium AL-Star because of this.

Lamy Safari in hand

The cap pushes on to close and to post (which is does so securely). Being a light pen the balance isn’t effected if you post the cap. It’s a good comfortable length whether posted or not. The metal clip is distinctive, strong and very clippy.

Lamy Safari clip

Lamy use their own size of converter or cartridge. Cartridges are easily found on the high street (but often only in blue or black). You’ll usually have to pay extra for a converter: they’re not expensive as such but they are relatively expensive compared to the cost of the pen. I’ve always found Lamy converters to be well made and reliable but I do wish they’d shorten the length of the knob and increase the length of the cylinder.

Lamy Safari undone

There’s a useful ink window for keeping an eye on how much ink you have left.

Lamy Safari ink window hero shot

The most controversial part of the Safari is the grip. It’s triangular and you’ll either not really notice it or hate it. Some people are philosophically opposed to it’s attempt to impose what Lamy considers a good grip onto their right to write anyway they like. I’m in the don’t-notice-it camp but I do think that if Lamy used a round grip here it would make the pen accessible to more people. There are lots of people who just don’t get on with this grip because that’s not how they hold their pens.

Lamy Safari nib

I love the Lamy Safari. I enjoy using it as much as I enjoy using pens that cost over ten times as much. It’s a great beginner’s pen because it’s easily bought, fantastic value and a great first step into discovering different nibs and inks. It’s a pen that’s full of fun. It brings me joy. If you don’t mind the grip, it might bring you joy, too. Is the fountain pen world benefitting from the Safari being so many people’s first pen? Absolutely! It’s a good value and very reliable pen. Should it be in your collection? Absolutely! It’s a lot of fun and very flexible, with the easily swappable nibs. Should you recommend it to a friend? Absolutely! Or maybe even buy them one…

Pros

Great value
Fun design
Good clip
Wide range of nib sizes

Cons

Proprietary cartridge/converter
Grip doesn’t suit everyone

Lamy Safari handwritten review

You can find many more reviews of the Lamy Safari on Pennaquod.