Fisher Space Pen Stowaway Review

Fisher Space Pen Stowaway Review

(Sarah Read is an author, editor, yarn artist, and pen/paper/ink addict. You can find more about her at her website and on Bluesky. And her latest book, The Atropine Tree, is now available!)

This little midcentury wonder is the source of one of my earliest stationery fascinations. That's probably true for a lot of us. A pen that can write underwater or in space, in extreme temperatures or on any surface! In a world where all I had were standard #2 pencils and temperamental ballpoints, the concept of a pen that could not fail and lasted longer than any other was the holy grail, especially for a kid who wrote for fun. Sadly, I wouldn't acquire said grail until I reached adulthood. I bought my first Fisher Space Pen in 2007 and it only recently stopped writing. While it wasn't my everyday pen, it did live in my craft bag for making notes on patterns. Nineteen years of service is a good run for any pen! That pen was one of their bullet-shaped pens. In the past few months, I was looking for a pen that would fit in the slim sleeve of my pocket-sized Plotter notebook, and I saw that the Stowaway model of the Fisher Space Pen is this perfect, slim pocket size. So I decided to give it a try as my pocket notebook pen.

Fisher Space Pen Stowaway

This model of the Fisher Space Pen is basically just a capped cartridge. A magical cartridge, to be sure. The sealed, pressurized ink chamber is what allows it to write even if you're visiting Hoth or Mount Doom. But it doesn't have much build to it. The body and cap are thin aluminum that friction-fit together. There's a brass-colored clip with the word Fisher stamped into it, though this model is also available without the clip. It comes with a medium point and black ink. The cap does post, bringing its wee 3.9" up to a 5.13" which is close to a standard pen length. It's only .25" in diameter, so may be too slim to comfortably write with for long, but it's perfect as a wallet pen, where you're just using it to sign a receipt here and there. Bonus: It will actually write on the receipt paper!

Fisher Space Pen Stowaway Hand

It writes just like a standard ballpoint, but without the fussiness. I have not experienced any skipping or faint lines. The ink does smear a little if rubbed, but that's true of most oil-based ballpoint inks. That pressurized cartridge keeps the ink flowing upside-down, in zero gravity, and in temps ranging from -30 to +250 degrees Fahrenheit. Space? No problem. Wisconsin in February? Might need a different pen for that. But it does fit perfectly in the pen sleeve of my pocket Plotter, so mission accomplished, there. However, getting it out of the pen sleeve can be tricky, as the friction-fit cap slides off too easily, leaving the body of the pen in the sleeve, so I have to wiggle it free. It's still the best non-fountain pen I've found for this use case, though. The Kaweco Liliput is the best fountain pen for this specific pen sleeve, but I've found myself using the pocket plotter when traveling and camping--situations where a water resistant, more versatile ink was needed. I suspect this Stowaway will live in this Plotter for the next nineteen years.

Fisher Space Pen Stowaway Writing

The Fisher Space Pen Stowaway sells for around $17 MSRP, but you can get it in black, blue, or red from Goldspot Pens for around $14.45. That feels like a lot for something so lightweight and tiny, but it is refillable, and if it lasts as long as my previous Fisher pen, it's well worth it. I fully intend on getting another in a decade or two.

(Goldspot provided this product at a discount to The Pen Addict for review purposes.)


Enjoy reading The Pen Addict? Then consider becoming a member to receive additional weekly content, giveaways, and discounts in The Pen Addict shop. Plus, you support me and the site directly, for which I am very grateful.

Membership starts at just $5/month, with a discounted annual option available. To find out more about membership click here and join us!

Fisher Space Pen Stowaway Packaging
Posted on July 9, 2026 and filed under Fisher Space Pen, Pen Reviews.

Gamify Your Life Players Handbook Giveaway

Gamify Your Life Players Handbook Giveaway

The Gamify Your Life Players Handbook is a wonderful way to help you manage your planner, journal, and even your life in a fun and functional way. I had the pleasure of taking Ana Reinert’s class at the St. Louis Pen Show where she provided tips and tricks on how she created and uses this handbook. I have one copy of the zine to give away this week, and will include a set of dice and a Roll for Initiative sticker sheet to get you started. Read the rules below and get to entering!

Posted on July 7, 2026 and filed under Giveaways.

Sailor Que Será Erasable Gel Ink Pen Review

Sailor Que Será Erasable Gel Ink Pen

They are trying.

And you know what? I give Sailor credit for that. As Pilot has proven with the FriXion, there is an enormous market for erasable gel ink pens. Pilot has been perfecting theirs for 20 years, which is important context to keep in mind as I go through the rest of this review, because the Sailor Que Será is not a good pen. Yet.

The Que Será was launched by Sailor earlier this year, with an ink formulation designed to differentiate itself from the FriXion. Where the FriXion uses thermo-sensitive ink and erases via heat generated by friction, the Que Será designed their ink to essentially sit on top of the page, and allow the eraser to “peel” off the ink, similar to a traditional pencil erasing experience.

Sailor Que Será Erasable Gel Ink Pen Barrel

Shades of a Sharpie marker, but with Pentel parts on the front end.

That may sound weird, but it works. The eraser marks are mostly clean, although there is some mess left behind, again, like a standard pencil. This time, it’s ink bits, not eraser bits, left on the page that need to be brushed off. This ink formulation does mean your words are actually erased, unlike with the FriXion, where the words can be “restored,” by placing the page in a cool area, like a freezer.

Sailor Que Será

EnerGel refill shape and grip section.

While it’s main feature, gel ink that erases, works well, the general writing experience is one of the worst I’ve had with any standard pen, erasable or not. That’s a problem for the Que Será, because I’ll never get to the main benefit if I don’t enjoy writing with the pen in the first place.

Sailor Que Será Writing

I was sent two Que Será pens by a friend - one Black, one Red - each with an 0.8 mm tip size. From my first lines the writing experience was underwhelming, and with more use it escalated to downright bad. I think the good part of the ink formulation - the erasability - plays directly into the poor writing performance. The ink sometimes builds up on the tip, making my lines messy, but more annoying was the constant railroading of the lines on the page.

Sailor Que Será Erasing

Initial erasing.

Sailor Que Será Brushed

Brushed off. You can still see the underlying writing like with almost any erasable product, and I could take another pass to erase more fully.

Railroading is an effect where you see white space in the lines on the page, usually in the middle of a mark. It was constant with both Que Será pens, but more noticeable with the Black. I did try to wipe off the tips on occasion, but that was a fool’s errand. They started bad, and stayed that way. On top of that, their pigmentation was light compared to standard gel ink options.

Sailor Que Será Close-up

A close-up of the writing. Look at the vertical lines - especially every “T” in both colors - not good.

While all of this is bad for the current iteration of the Que Será, I wonder if they can find their footing like Pilot did with the FriXion? When it launched, the ink was very light - the Black much lighter than the current Que Será - and the erasability was only average. It didn’t work well enough to be an every day pen, but Pilot stuck with it, and turned it into a high-quality gel ink pen that, almost as a bonus, has great erasability if that’s a feature you need.

What path will Sailor take with the Que Será? We can only wait and see. Now that Pentel is also under the same corporate umbrella as Sailor, can they continue to iterate and improve on it together? I hope so, because competition is good, and right now, the FriXion continues to have none.


Enjoy reading The Pen Addict? Then consider becoming a member to receive additional weekly content, giveaways, and discounts in The Pen Addict shop. Plus, you support me and the site directly, for which I am very grateful.

Membership starts at just $5/month, with a discounted annual option available. To find out more about membership click here and join us!

Sailor Que Será Nib Crud

Maybe keep a “nib crud” page handy.

Posted on July 6, 2026 and filed under Sailor, Que Será, Erasable, Gel, Pen Reviews.