Pacific Northwest Pen Show 2026: Portland Dates, Venue, and Tips for First-Timers
The Pacific Northwest Pen Show 2026 runs July 10-13 at the Sheraton Airport Hotel in Portland, Oregon, with VIP early access on July 10. I’ve attended four regional pen shows over the past decade, and this one consistently delivers the best vendor-to-collector ratio on the West Coast—if you know how to navigate it.
First-time attendees often waste the first half-day wandering aimlessly or missing key vendors who sell out by noon. This guide breaks down exactly what to expect, when to arrive, and how to maximize your time whether you’re hunting vintage Sheaffers or looking to test-drive a Nakaya.
Event Dates and Schedule Breakdown
The Pacific Northwest Pen Show 2026 spans four days, but the structure matters more than the dates. Here’s what actually happens each day:
Thursday, July 10: VIP Early Access
VIP tickets grant entry from 4:00 PM to 8:00 PM. This is when serious collectors snag the best vintage inventory before public hours. If you’re chasing specific grails—pre-war Parkers, early Pelikans, or rare Japanese pens—VIP access is worth the premium. Standard attendees wait until Friday.
Friday, July 11: Public Day One
Doors open at 10:00 AM. This is peak chaos in the best way. Vendors have full inventory, custom nibmeisters take walk-ins, and the testing tables aren’t yet covered in dried ink. Arrive by 9:45 AM if you want first crack at the vintage fountain pens that won’t last past lunch.
Saturday, July 12: Public Day Two
10:00 AM to 6:00 PM. Saturday draws the largest crowds, including casual enthusiasts and gift-shoppers. Good for workshops and slower browsing, less ideal for snagging rare stock. Nibmeister queues are longest on Saturday—book services early Friday if possible.
Sunday, July 13: Final Day Deals
10:00 AM to 3:00 PM. Vendors start packing early, but you’ll find the best price concessions. I’ve negotiated 20-30% discounts on Sunday afternoon as dealers prefer selling over re-packing inventory. The trade-off: heavily-picked selection.
Venue Details: Sheraton Airport Hotel Portland
The Sheraton Portland Airport is a standard conference hotel positioned 10 minutes from PDX. The show occupies their main ballroom and adjacent meeting rooms—about 12,000 square feet of vendor space.
Parking and Access
Self-parking runs $15/day; I recommend parking once Friday morning and leaving your car until Sunday. The hotel sits right off I-205, making it accessible whether you’re driving from Seattle, Eugene, or flying into Portland. MAX Red Line light rail stops at the airport, then it’s a 12-minute walk or quick Uber to the hotel.
Testing Areas and Amenities
The show provides communal testing stations with ink wells, but bring your own paper. Hotel-provided stock is cheap copy paper that bleeds with anything wetter than Noodler’s X-Feather. I pack a Tomoe River paper notebook for real nib behavior testing.
Water stations and pen-cleaning supplies are scattered throughout, though paper towels run out fast. Pack a microfiber cloth and small bulb syringe if you plan to test multiple pens.
What to Expect: Vendor Mix and Show Layout
Pacific Northwest Pen Show 2026 typically hosts 40-50 vendors spanning vintage dealers, modern retailers, custom makers, and nibmeisters. The layout clusters similar vendors—vintage in the north end, modern production pens center, custom artisans south end.
Vendor Categories You’ll Encounter
| Vendor Type | What They Offer | Best Time to Visit |
|---|---|---|
| Vintage Dealers | Pre-1980 pens, restored and unrestored. Parker 51s, Sheaffer Snorkels, Pelikan 400s. | Friday morning or VIP Thursday |
| Modern Retailers | Current production from Pilot, Sailor, Lamy, TWSBI. Often show-exclusive discounts. | Any time; stock replenishes |
| Custom Pen Makers | Hand-turned acrylics, ebonite, custom materials. Often take commissions. | Friday or Saturday for full selection |
| Nibmeisters | On-site grinds, repairs, tuning. Stub, italic, architect grinds available. | Book services Friday AM |
| Ink & Paper Vendors | Bottled inks, samples, specialty papers. Good for fountain pen ink discovery. | Any time; low sell-out risk |
Special Features and Workshops
Past shows have included nib grinding demonstrations, pen history talks, and beginner workshops on pen maintenance. The 2026 schedule wasn’t finalized as of May 15, but expect similar programming Saturday afternoon when crowds are thickest.
First-Timer Strategy: How to Navigate the Show
Your first pen show feels overwhelming. Fifty vendors, hundreds of pens, and you’re surrounded by collectors who seem to know every dealer personally. Here’s my approach after four regional shows:
Pre-Show Preparation
Make a hit list of 3-5 specific pens or grinds you’re seeking. “Browse vintage” is not a plan—you’ll blow your budget on impulse buys and miss the pens you actually wanted. My July 2024 list: Pilot Custom 823, any stub-ground vintage Sheaffer, ink samples of Robert Oster Fire & Ice.
Research vendor lists once the organizers post them (usually 3-4 weeks before the show). If you’re hunting something specific, email vendors in advance. I’ve had dealers hold pens for show pickup after pre-show correspondence.
Friday Morning Execution
Arrive 15 minutes before doors open. Do a speed lap of the entire show in the first 20 minutes—don’t stop to test yet, just identify where key vendors are positioned. Note the nibmeister stations and grab time slots if they’re taking advance bookings.
Then execute your hit list in priority order. Vintage dealers first, custom makers second, modern retailers third. If you see a grail pen, buy it immediately. The “I’ll think about it and come back” approach means someone else owns it by lunch.
Testing Protocol
Most vendors let you test any pen under $300 without hovering. Higher-end pieces require asking. When testing, I check three things: nib-to-paper feedback, line width consistency under pressure, and cap seal quality. Don’t spend 10 minutes on a single pen—if it doesn’t feel right in 30 seconds, move on.
Bring your own fountain pen case for purchases. Dealers provide bubble wrap, but a proper case prevents $400 pens from banging together in your bag.
Nibmeister Services
If you want custom grinds or tuning, bring pens with you rather than buying-and-grinding the same day. Turnaround times vary—some nibmeisters finish in 20 minutes, others need 3-4 hours or even mail-back for complex work. Typical costs: basic tuning $20-30, stub/italic grinds $40-60, specialty grinds (architect, needlepoint) $75+.
Budget Planning: What Things Actually Cost
Pen shows offer better pricing than retail, but “deal” is relative. Here’s realistic 2026 pricing based on past regional shows:
- Vintage starter pens: $50-150 for restored Esterbrooks, later-model Parker 45s, basic Sheaffers
- Mid-range modern pens: $150-300 for Pilot Custom 74, Sailor Pro Gear Slim, Lamy 2000 (10-20% below online pricing)
- Premium Japanese pens: $400-800 for Pilot Custom 823, Sailor King of Pen, Platinum Century 3776 with special nibs
- Custom handmade pens: $200-500 depending on materials and maker reputation
- High-end vintage: $500-2,000+ for pre-war Parkers, early Pelikans, rare colors and configurations
I budget $500 for a productive show day, knowing I might spend $200 or $800 depending on what appears. Cash gets better deals with some vendors, though most take cards now.
What to Bring: Essential Gear List
Don’t show up empty-handed. Pack these items for maximum efficiency:
- Quality paper notebook: Tomoe River or Clairefontaine for accurate ink/nib testing
- Microfiber cloth: For cleaning nibs between tests
- Small water bottle and cup: For rinsing nibs (vendors appreciate not contaminating their ink wells)
- Pen case or roll: Protect purchases during transport
- Cash: $200-300 for vendors who offer cash discounts
- Your current pens: If seeking nibmeister services or repairs
- Phone charger: You’ll photograph dozens of pens
Hotel and Logistics
The Sheraton Portland Airport charges $159-189/night for show dates (2026 rates). Book early for best pricing. The hotel typically offers a show rate code—check the official PNW Pen Show website when they post it.
Portland in July averages 80°F and sunny. The show is entirely indoors, but plan for warm weather if you’re exploring Portland before/after. Dining options at the hotel are limited to the standard bar/restaurant; I walk to the nearby Columbia Square development for better food between sessions.
Beyond the Show: Portland Pen Shops Worth Visiting
If you’re traveling to Portland for the show, schedule time for these local pen destinations:
Oblation Papers & Press (downtown Portland): Boutique paper store with limited but excellent pen selection. Known for custom notebooks and letterpress work.
Powell’s Books: The flagship store has a decent stationery section with fountain pen-friendly notebooks, inks, and entry-level pens. More for browsing than serious acquisition.
Common First-Timer Mistakes to Avoid
After watching dozens of newbies at regional shows, these errors appear constantly:
Buying the first pen you test: That Sailor Pro Gear feels amazing because you’ve never tried a 21k nib before. Test five pens before committing to any purchase over $200.
Ignoring vintage entirely: Modern pens dominate marketing, but a $100 restored Sheaffer Triumph often outperforms a $300 contemporary pen. Don’t skip vintage tables.
Over-focusing on discounts: A 15% show discount on a pen you don’t love is still wasted money. Buy pens you’ll actually use, not deals you can brag about.
Skipping nibmeister consultations: Ten minutes with an experienced nibmeister teaches more about nib geometry than six months of forum reading. Ask questions even if you’re not commissioning work.
Burning out by Saturday: Pace yourself. If you attend Friday and Saturday, take a two-hour break Saturday afternoon. Pen show fatigue leads to poor purchase decisions.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need VIP access or is regular admission sufficient?
Regular admission (Friday-Sunday) works fine for most collectors. Buy VIP Thursday access if you’re hunting specific rare vintage pens that will sell out immediately, or if you want relaxed browsing before crowds arrive. I skip VIP unless I’ve pre-arranged to see specific inventory from a dealer.
Can I negotiate prices at pen shows?
Yes, especially on Sunday or for multiple-pen purchases. I don’t haggle on clearly-priced modern production pens (a Lamy 2000 costs what it costs), but vintage pricing has flexibility. Polite negotiation—”Would you consider $180 for this Parker 51?”—works better than aggressive lowballing. Cash sometimes unlocks 5-10% additional discount.
Are pen shows suitable for complete beginners?
Absolutely. Most vendors enjoy introducing newcomers to fountain pens, and shows let you test dozens of pens in one day versus buying blind online. Start at the modern production vendor tables where staff expect beginner questions. Budget $50-100 for your first pen and skip the rare vintage tables until you know what you’re looking for.
How do I know if a vintage pen is fairly priced?
Research completed eBay listings before the show for comparable models. Pen show pricing typically runs 10-20% higher than online because you’re buying in-hand, tested, and often with warranty. If a vendor wants 50%+ over recent sold comps without clear justification (rare color, mint condition, special nib), walk away. Reputable dealers explain their pricing when asked.
What’s the best day to attend if I can only go one day?
Friday offers the best balance of full inventory, manageable crowds, and access to nibmeisters. Saturday has the most energy and programming but picked-over vintage stock. Sunday delivers deals but limited selection. If you’re serious about acquiring specific pens, Friday is non-negotiable.
About Alex Chen
Product Designer · Fountain Pen Collector
Product designer by trade, fountain pen obsessive by choice. 10 years collecting, 200+ pens tested. I apply an engineer’s eye to nib geometry, ink flow, and build quality. Read more →
