Rohrer and Klingner - Morinda

Rohrer and Klingner Morinda fountain pen ink drop

Rohrer & Klingner - Morinda - Ink drop

This is Morinda from Rohrer & Klingner. It’s a very pleasant red with good water resistance. The name Morinda comes from a fruiting tree (also called Noni fruit or Mengkudu), found in Australia, SE Asia, and the Pacific islands. There was a noni tree across the street from my old house in Singapore, and at times it gave off a strong, very strange smell. The translucent, white-grey fruit can be eaten (although rarely is), and along with the leaves, can be used to make a medicinal tea. The bark is used as a popular red or purple dye that matches the ink fairly well.

Like the Morinda dye, this ink is an earthy, powdery scarlet red. I find it much more appealing than the standard mid-red or candy apple red that is so common. It isn’t a strong shading ink, but shading showed on all of the papers that I tried. The tips of the occasional stroke fade to a lighter shade of dark pink red. There is some dark edging in the splatter, but in writing no sheen or halo was found.

Rohrer and Klingner Morinda fountain pen ink swatch card

Rohrer & Klingner - Morinda - Ink Swatch Card

As a writing ink, it performed consistently well. Strokes were clean and crisp on premiums, with only a slight feather on office copy. Shading was strongest on Kokuyo, and weakest on office copy, but it was never a strong feature. Drying was fast on all papers, averaging 5-15 seconds on premiums, and under 5 seconds on office copy.

Morinda is a lovely scarlet red. Some might even consider it a perfect red. It’s consistently nice across a wide range of papers, dries fast, and has good water-resistance. For best results, I’d recommend coated papers, but this ink is flexible. I’d love to see a little more shading, and maybe a little halo edging, but as it is, this is a great ink!

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Rohrer and Klingner - Salix (IG)

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Rohrer and Klingner - Königsblau