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Thoughts and stationery

Kaweco Sport Review: The Perfect Gateway Fountain Pen — June 8, 2025

Kaweco Sport Review: The Perfect Gateway Fountain Pen

The Kaweco Sport fountain pen has broken free. It has escaped the confines of the stationery enthusiast and the shops they (we) frequent. They pop up everywhere – from trendy bookshops looking to diversify to chic ‘lifestyle’ boutiques and even museum giftshops. Finding one is simple.

That ubiquity is why it was one of my first fountain pens. It ticks all the boxers to make it a good, entry pen. It is affordable, comes a broad pallet of colour to match any style and can be found in all those shops above.

A review must cover some basic facts. The classic Kaweco Sport costs around $30/£22, is plastic (though metal versions are available) and comes with a gold or silver finish. It is light, at under 10 grams, and compact, around 10cm when capped. It slips easily into your pocket at the beginning of the day. It is a pen that wants to be with you everyday. But that means it can vanish without much effort – I have had to say goodbye to a mint Skyline version and still have no idea where it could have got to.

Easy to carry, easy to lose and easy to use – that’s the Kaweco Sport. It’s popularity means you can grab one in a range of nib sizes – from extra fine to double broad. Writing with it feels effortless; ink flows smoothly but doesn’t swamp the page. It glides. I can hardly remember it catching apart from on the worst paper.

Those nibs don’t take long to break in either – if they need any in the first place. The pen also takes the common short international standard cartridge, so you won’t have a problem finding ink you like. There is a converter available – though it isn’t the best quality. Mine leaked – staining the cap threads on my mint Skyline barrel which took a bit of work to get out. I’ve avoided the converter since and don’t feel the need to buy another.

So the Kaweco Sport is an easy-writing, accessible pen. Its otherwise basic design comes with one big flourish – its cap. Its distinctive octagonal shape is a smart feature – not only for its striking design but also since it means the pen won’t roll around your desk. The gold detailing works particularly well with the dark green version – part of the reason I got it.

But there is more to fountain pen than its design or how well it writes. Fountain pens can feel like ‘event’ pens when you first start using them. I had a feeling that I had to be writing something deep, meaningful and profound – something more elevated than jotting down a to do list before my memory leaked into the air rather than onto the page. The Kaweco Sport is a good pen and it is good in helping you get away from that thought.

It’s understated design also has another boon. While cheap, it still has a sense of sophistication about it – a quality all fountain pen enthusiasts are looking for. It won’t provoke a comment but it will be noticed. Your understated, sophisticated and discerning personality will glow through it – or to the extent that a £25 pen can allow.

If you enjoy the Kaweco Sport but are looking for a more sturdy version, there are aluminium and carbon fibre versions. Special and limited-time versions supplement the standard stable too – with added design elements and colours which may only be around for a short time.

The Kaweco Sport is a pen I would recommend. It can be an everyday pen while still having enough about it to make writing with it feel special. It’s a versatile, reliable writer that won’t weigh you down, empty your wallet or play hide-and-seek too often. That one drawback – being easy to lose – and the Sport is a good pen for someone only getting into fountain pens. For the more serious enthusiast, they can make good gifts too.

It’s a classic for a reason

Vital statistics

  • Nib size: Medium
  • Nib material: Stainless steel, gold plated
  • Price: £20.72 (Amazon) + Clip: £7.93 (Amazon)
  • Length: Capped: 105mm Barrel: 95mm Posted: 133mm
  • Diameter: 14mm
  • Weight: 20g
  • Material: Plastic

Other reviews:

Sheaffer 300: Fountain Pen Review — August 23, 2019

Sheaffer 300: Fountain Pen Review

Pens, especially fountain pens, mean so much more than their function. Take the Shaeffer 300 for example. Or, more precisely, my Shaeffer 300. I could give you a product breakdown, my trying-to-be-objective thoughts but then that wouldn’t really be telling you about it.

This pen is my oldest one. My parents gave it to me when I finished school. It was the pen I used when I first discovered the joy of writing with fountain pens. I could tell you that compared to some of the others I have got in the meantime, the Lamys, the Pilots, the Kawecos, it is a solid but unspectacular writer. It has a smoothness to it which is only interrupted by a tiny scratchiness which actually works to give you some nice feedback. The stiff nib doesn’t give much – there is little variation in line width.

Sheaffer 300 Fountain Pen Review Capped

There are definitely some drawbacks to it though. The body is made out of smooth resin broken up by chrome finishings. It is a classic cigar shape, cut at both ends as if you were to smoke it. The grip tapers toward the nib but is smooth. It can be uncomfortable to grip it for a long time as you do have to pinch it. It is top heavy when posted, though the cap does some nice give to the clip. It feels like it was designed to actually sit in a pocket.

But it looks grown-up. I got it when I thought I was a grown-up, though I had a lot of growing up to do. Over the years I have had – now over a decade – I have changed and developed. I developed a love for stationery in general and fountain pens in particular. Coming into my own I found out it wasn’t the best pen you could buy. Even for the £38.50 (at the time of writing) you can get it on Amazon for right now it is beaten handily by a Pilot Metropolitan for looks and action. Even now I find myself reaching for a TWBSI Eco or Kaweco Sport.

Sheaffer 300 Fountain Pen Review Uncapped

But the love for fountain pens isn’t rational. I will write a piece about why fountain pens are great writing tools but I didn’t get into them because they were the best writers. A bic, at the end of the day, records the same thing on the same paper. The cristal doesn’t need to be cleaned, it can be easily carried on a plane. You don’t mess up your hands every time it runs out of it. But a bic is ugly, it is just a pen.

A fountain pen can be so much more. It lasts. From graduation to going to university, getting your first job and moving countries. I would not have carried the same bic with me as I did my Shaeffer.

Fountain pens are a connection to the past. In how they enhance beautiful handwritten notes in the age of typing and the word processor. In how they last and stay with you. In how they change and remain the same.

Having a passion for fountain pens isn’t rational. It is not cheap. It is not neat. But the joy you get from using beautiful tools can not be replicated. Rationality is overrated.

So, I give my Shaeffer 300 a 5/5 and would recommend you look at a different pen before you pick one up.

Vital statistics:

Nib: Medium

Price: £52.25 (Amazon)

Length: Capped: 140mm Uncapped: 120mm Posted: 154mm

Diameter: 13mm

Weight: Cap & Barrel: 46g Cap: 23g Barrel: 23g (full ink resevoir)

Materials: Black lacquered brass barrel with articulate pocket clip on cap

The box it came in was quite nice, I think, but I’ve lost it. 

Tested with Diamine Blue/Black ink on Clairefontaine Triomphe A4 paper