I’ve been on a mechanical pencil kick recently, acquiring a handful of new, or new to me, models from JetPens as they appeared. My original plan was to do a combo review of the ones that stood out, but the more pencils I acquired the more I felt they each had their own story to tell, and grouping them together might muddy the waters unnecessarily.
As I hemmed and hawed how to present this batch of graphite, I decided to grab the pencil that clicked the most from the jump. There are other pencils in the queue that are more expensive, and others that are brand new models to the market, but for reasons you will find out below, I was drawn to the Pentel Graph 1000 60th Anniversary Edition.
This shouldn’t have surprised me, as I previously reviewed a limited edition colorway back in 2021 and thoroughly enjoyed it. This blacked-out model is equally as fantastic. The barrel is the standout feature, featuring an aluminum grip section and a plastic body. It’s narrower than many pencils, too. Given my love for the Pentel Sharp series, it should come as no surprise that light and narrow is my jam.
The primary difference between these two pencils is that the Graph 1000 grip is straight-sided, and the Sharp is tapered. The Graph 1000 also has rubber bumps on the grip section, and an engineering-style step tip. There are more than enough details to differentiate them, but the feel in hand is surprisingly close.
Very different shape, surprisingly similar feel.
As great as I think this pencil is, and as much as I would recommend it to anyone looking for this set of specs, it does have one problem: price. Specifically, the price in relation to other pencils in the Pentel lineup.
This Limited Edition is $16.00. In a vacuum, that’s a fair and reasonable price for this pencil. The standard model Graph 1000 runs $11.75, and at a glance, has very minor visual differences versus the 60th anniversary edition. The Creator’s Style Graph 1000, which again is only color differences, is $12.50. Overall, this is a reasonably-priced group of pencils, and at a fair premium to the more basic Pentel Sharp.
Enter the Pentel GraphGear 1000.
With one minor addition to the name, this mechanical pencil changes the entire calculus. This is a full metal barrel, knurled grip, retractable lead pipe superstar of a pencil. Like the other Pentel models above, it has history behind it, and lifelong fans.
For a feature set as complete as the GraphGear has, I’m confused why it is essentially the same price as a lesser model. Don’t get me wrong, I’m happy it is priced that way, but the only reason to purchase a Graph 1000 over a GraphGear 1000 is aesthetics. The GraphGear is admittedly a bit aggressive in that department, but for what you get it is kind of a no-brainer.
I guess it is time to make another mechanical pencil order.
(JetPens provided this product at no charge to The Pen Addict for review purposes.)
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