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15 March 2026 · 6 min read

How to Choose the Right Dip Pen Nib for Illustration

If you've ever stood in an art shop staring at a wall of tiny metal nibs, each one looking almost identical to the next, you're not alone. I spent a solid year buying the wrong nibs before I worked out what actually matters. This is the guide I wish I'd had when I started.

Introduction to Dip Pens

A dip pen is beautifully simple: a handle, a nib, and a pot of ink. No cartridge, no reservoir, no mechanism. You dip, you draw. That simplicity is exactly what makes it such a responsive tool — the line you get is a direct conversation between your hand and the paper.

Unlike technical pens or fineliners, a dip pen gives you line variation. Press harder and the tines spread, giving you a thicker stroke. Ease off and you get a hairline. That expressiveness is why illustrators have used them for centuries, and why they're still hard to beat for certain kinds of work.

The catch is that the nib you choose determines almost everything about the mark you can make. Get the right one and the drawing flows. Get the wrong one and you'll be fighting the tool all day.

Types of Nibs

Mapping Nibs

Mapping nibs (sometimes called crow quill nibs) are the finest of the lot. They were originally designed for cartographers, which tells you everything about the kind of line they produce: extremely fine, precise, and controlled.

Drawing Nibs

Drawing nibs are the middle ground and probably where most illustrators should start. They're more flexible than mapping nibs and hold more ink, which means you can sustain longer strokes without dipping.

Calligraphy Nibs

These have flat, chisel-shaped tips rather than pointed ones. They're designed to produce thick-and-thin strokes based on the angle you hold the pen, not the pressure you apply.

Choosing Based on Your Style

The honest answer is that the right nib depends entirely on what you're trying to achieve. But here are some starting points:

If you work small and detailed — think densely hatched illustrations, intricate patterns, or fine pen-and-ink work — start with mapping nibs. The Gillott 303 is forgiving enough for beginners whilst still being capable of serious precision.

If your work is expressive and gestural — looser figure work, editorial illustration, character design — a medium-flex drawing nib is your friend. The Nikko G or Zebra G will give you that dynamic thick-to-thin transition.

If you mix illustration with hand lettering, keep a calligraphy nib in your kit alongside your regular drawing nib. Switching between the two during a piece can create lovely contrast.

Tip

Buy a cheap nib sampler pack before committing to a bulk order. Most art suppliers sell mixed sets of 6-10 nibs for a few quid. Try each one on the paper you normally use — a nib that feels gorgeous on smooth Bristol will behave completely differently on cold-pressed watercolour paper.

Ink Compatibility

Not all inks play nicely with all nibs. Here's what I've learned through plenty of trial and error:

Care and Maintenance

Nibs are consumable — they wear out and that's normal. But proper care extends their life considerably:

My Personal Favourites

After a few years of experimenting, these are the nibs I keep coming back to:

Paired with Winsor & Newton Indian ink on smooth Bristol board, the Nikko G is about as close to a perfect combination as I've found. But that's my preference for my style — your combination will be different, and the only way to find it is to experiment.

The beauty of dip pens is that experimentation costs almost nothing. A new nib is 50p. So buy a handful, fill an afternoon with mark-making, and pay attention to which one makes you forget you're holding a tool at all. That's the one.

RH

Ryan Helsby is a Staffordshire-based illustrator studying BA Illustration with the OCA. He works in ink, watercolour and graphite. Browse prints in the shop.

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