Thanks for the reply.Sure ya can! Though I'm inclined to make a joke that I use them solely to sign my name to checks. But everything's electronic nowadays.
Which is why I like to use pens. I'm a novelist. And a publisher. I write a lot in Pages using my Mac mini or an iPad, but I've found if that's slow going or I'm too distracted by the internet, I switch over to pen and paper for a while. It doesn't take too long to transcribe a chapter (or three).
As a publisher, I lay out books and then use a pen to edit. Usually in a nice teal. It's less jarring to see suggestions in blue than to see swaths of edits so deep they look like the story started bleeding.
I did some writing on my iPad with a wireless keyboard before and actually got a lot done that way, too. I surprised myself at how much I was able to do on a small screen and did that for a while. But now, I'm using the new MacBook Air with its butterfly keyboard style and I quite enjoy it.
Using teal to edit a work would seem less jarring for sure; that beats having a felt tip red pen ripping across the pages! hahaha
On the topic of pens, today was my first day back in the office after an extended holiday break. I brought my fine nib Cross with me and used it a few times. But on standard copier paper, it didn't look at all impressive. Then a couple of other times I grabbed my ballpoint pen to sign some stuff and wow, the feeling was quite noticeable. I used to think the particular ballpoint I was using was nice and I liked it. It was just a certain model from Papermate - but I like it for what it is. However, when comparing it to the fountain pens, what a world of difference it was. The smoothness was totally missing on my ballpoint pen.
It's amazing what we can get used to and even enjoy. That is until we find something better by an order of magnitude and then wonder how we ever lived before it.