There is nothing more frustrating than sitting down to write with your favorite fountain pen, only to feel that telltale scratch and drag across the page. I have been there more times than I care to admit — a beautiful pen that writes like sandpaper instead of silk.
The good news: most scratchy nibs are fixable at home. After 10+ years of collecting and tinkering with fountain pens, I have developed a systematic approach that resolves the problem in the vast majority of cases. This guide walks you through every step, from simple diagnosis to hands-on smoothing.
Why Do Fountain Pen Nibs Scratch?
Before you start poking at your nib, it helps to understand what is actually causing the problem. Scratching usually comes from one of four sources:
- Misaligned tines — The two halves of the nib tip are not perfectly even, so one side catches the paper fibers. This is the most common cause.
- Rough tipping material — Fountain pen nibs are tipped with a hard alloy (usually iridium or similar). If the tip was not polished smoothly at the factory, it will scratch.
- Ink flow problems — A nib that is too dry writes with more resistance and feels scratchier than it should, even if the tines are fine.
- Wrong paper — Cheap, rough paper will make even the smoothest nib feel scratchy. Rule this out first before blaming the pen.
Step 1: Rule Out Paper and Ink
Before you touch the nib, test the pen on better paper. Try Rhodia, Clairefontaine, Tomoe River, or any paper marketed as “fountain pen friendly.” These have a smoother, denser surface that lets the nib glide.
If the scratch disappears on good paper, your nib is fine — you just need better paper for daily writing.
Also check your ink. Some inks are very dry (low lubrication), which increases perceived scratchiness. Try a more lubricated ink like Pilot Iroshizuku, Diamine Registrar’s, or any ink with “silky” in the reviews. If the scratch improves, add a drop of Diamine Inkography or a small amount of glycerin to your current ink bottle.
Step 2: Inspect the Nib Under Magnification
Get a loupe or jeweler’s magnifier (10x is ideal) and look at the nib tip head-on and from the side. You are looking for:
- One tine sitting higher than the other (misalignment)
- Visible roughness or burrs on the tip
- The slit being closed too tight or spread too wide
A phone macro lens attachment works in a pinch. You can also take a photo and zoom in. What you see here determines which fix to apply.
Step 3: Fix Tine Misalignment
If one tine is higher than the other, this is your problem. The fix requires gentle pressure — and patience.
The Thumbnail Method
Hold the pen in your writing hand and press the tip firmly against your thumbnail at your normal writing angle. Apply light downward pressure while sliding the pen. Your nail is slightly flexible and can nudge a tine back into place without damaging the tip. Do this 3–4 times, check alignment with the loupe, and repeat.
The Brass Shim Method
If the tines are too closed (ink starved) or one is visibly lower, you can use a thin brass shim — a folded piece of aluminum foil works in an emergency. Slide it gently into the slit at the tip, then carefully spread or press the tines to level them. Work slowly and check frequently. This takes a light touch.
Important: never force anything. Fountain pen nibs are springy but not indestructible. A nib that has been over-bent or twisted is much harder to save.
Step 4: Smooth the Tip
If the tines are aligned but the nib still scratches, the tip material itself needs polishing. This is called “nib smoothing” and is a legitimate technique used by professional nibmeisters and experienced collectors alike.
Micromesh Smoothing
Micromesh is an abrasive plastic film that comes in grits from 1500 to 12000. You can buy a micromesh kit on Amazon for around $10.
Here is the process:
- Fill the pen or dip the nib in ink so you can feel the difference as you work.
- Start with 8000 grit micromesh laid flat on a hard surface.
- Write figure-8 patterns on the micromesh at your normal writing angle, applying only the weight of the pen — no extra pressure.
- After 10–15 figure-8s, test on paper. Repeat if needed.
- Finish with 12000 grit to polish.
Check under magnification between passes. You want to remove just enough material to eliminate the rough spot — not reshape the whole nib.
Smooth-Away Stick Method
A “Smooth-Away” nail buffer (the white kind sold at drugstores) contains a very fine abrasive and works similarly to micromesh. Run the nib tip across the surface using figure-8 motions. This is a bit less controlled than true micromesh but is more accessible for beginners.
What NOT to Use
Avoid sandpaper, emery boards, or anything coarser than 2000 grit. These will remove too much material and destroy the tip geometry. Some people swear by “Mylar film” (the thin plastic from a pen packaging sleeve) — it is very gentle and works for minor roughness only.
Step 5: Check Ink Flow
After any smoothing work, recheck ink flow. Sometimes smoothing closes the tines slightly and reduces flow. Hold the pen tip-down and watch for a consistent bead of ink to form. If ink is not flowing freely:
- Soak the nib in room-temperature water for 10 minutes to clear any debris or dried ink
- Use a thin piece of folded mylar to very gently open the tines a fraction
- Try a wetter-flowing ink
When to Send It to a Nibmeister
Some problems are beyond home repair. You should consult a professional nibmeister if:
- The nib has a significant bend, crack, or the tines are severely splayed
- You have tried smoothing and the nib still writes poorly
- It is a vintage or high-value nib (Pelikan M800, Montblanc 149, etc.) that you cannot afford to experiment on
- The nib needs a custom grind (stub, cursive italic, etc.)
Nibmeisters I trust: Mark Bacas, Mike Masuyama, and Pendleton Brown are three of the most well-known in the community. Prices typically run $20–$50 for a smooth and tune, well worth it for a pen you love.
Preventing Scratchy Nibs in the Future
A few habits keep nibs writing smoothly long-term:
- Store pens horizontally or nib-up when not in use — nib-down storage lets sediment settle on the tip
- Flush your pens every 4–6 weeks, even if they are writing fine
- Use quality paper daily — rough paper microabrades the tip over time
- Do not press hard — fountain pens write from ink flow, not pressure. Pressing forces the tines apart unevenly and can misalign them
- Cap your pen when not writing — an uncapped nib picks up dust and lint that works into the tipping material
Quick Diagnosis Cheat Sheet
| Symptom | Likely Cause | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Scratches only on upstrokes | Misaligned tine catching on pull-back | Tine alignment (thumbnail or shim) |
| Scratchy in all directions | Rough tipping material | Micromesh smoothing |
| Only scratchy on cheap paper | Paper, not the nib | Switch to better paper |
| Scratchy + ink skipping | Tines too closed + dry flow | Open tines slightly, wetter ink |
| Scratchy + ink flooding | Tines too open, tip catching | Tine alignment + check feed |
Final Thoughts
A scratchy fountain pen nib is almost always fixable — and fixing one yourself is deeply satisfying. Work systematically: paper first, then alignment, then smoothing. Take your time, check your progress under magnification, and do not rush. The pen that was driving you crazy on Monday can be writing like butter by Wednesday.
If you have a stubborn nib that will not cooperate no matter what you try, reach out in the comments and I will do my best to help troubleshoot. Happy writing.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use toothpaste to smooth a scratchy nib?
Some collectors use toothpaste (plain white, not gel) as a very mild abrasive. It can work for extremely minor roughness but is hard to control and may leave residue in the feed. Micromesh is more predictable and easier to use. Stick with micromesh if you can get it.
How long does it take to smooth a nib?
For a minor rough spot, 10–15 minutes of careful micromesh work usually does it. More significant issues — like a severely misaligned tine or deep burr — can take 30–60 minutes of patient work with frequent checks.
Will smoothing void the pen warranty?
Technically, modifying the nib voids most manufacturer warranties. If your pen is still under warranty and the scratch is significant, contact the manufacturer or retailer first — many will repair or replace a scratchy nib for free.
My nib scratches only when writing fast — what is wrong?
Fast writing often reveals ink starvation — the nib runs slightly dry at speed and drags. Try a wetter ink or open the tines slightly to increase flow. If a pen only scratches at speed, the flow is almost always the culprit rather than the tip itself.
Is it safe to smooth a vintage nib?
Vintage nibs — especially flexible ones — need extra care. The tipping material on older pens can be thinner and less uniform than modern nibs. I strongly recommend sending any vintage pen to a professional nibmeister rather than attempting home smoothing. The cost is worth the peace of mind.
