(Kimberly (she/her) took the express train down the fountain pen/stationery rabbit hole and doesn't want to be rescued. She can be found on Instagram @allthehobbies because there really are many, many hobbies!.)
When I was at the Atlas Stationer’s Fountain Pen Day event last November, I spent time flipping through their ink swatch binders and saw two inks that I couldn’t decide on: Dominant Industry Goryeo Celadon & Wearingeul Dewy Starlight (I will refer to them as Celadon & Starlight). Normally, I would have had to flip a coin but since the Bossman let me pick some inks for review, I thought, why not both?
You’re going to think I am colorblind because the colors on the two boxes aren’t the same. Celadon has minty green packaging and Starlight is dusty blue.
As in the past, all swatches were done on Col-O-Ring cards using a Kakimori steel dip nib and the non-brush end of a paintbrush, while writing samples were done with a TWSBI Go with a Medium nib and a Lamy Vista with a steel Medium nib. The TWSBI Go is a wetter writer and the Lamy is a drier writer, so these two give me a good idea of how an ink will look from different pens. The notebook used for writing samples is from Endless Recorder with 68 gsm Tomoe River paper. Dry times may be a bit slower on 52gsm TR or with wetter nibs or faster on papers like Rhodia, copy paper, Cosmo Air Light or with drier or finer nibs.
Celadon is a nice minty, muted pale green with opalescent silver shimmer in a wet writer like the TWSBI Go, but in the Lamy Vista, it is almost unreadable and there is barely any shimmer (I shake the bottle before filling each pen). The shimmer makes this ink look bluer than it really is.
The golden shimmer of Starlight makes this slightly bluer ink look greener than it really is. This is the opposite of Celadon which looks bluer because of the shimmer! This is probably why the two inks look much more similar when swatched than from the packaging. Like Celadon, Starlight is almost unreadably light in the Vista and hardly has any shimmer. The shimmer is much more pronounced in Starlight with the Go. Both inks had an average dry time of 30-40 seconds. The chromatography is subtle, with undertones of pink near the line and spreading out to light blue as expected.
I don’t usually gravitate towards lighter inks so I don’t have any inks that are dupes but there are some similar ones like Pennonia Patina for Celadon and Vinta Perya for Starlight, though neither of them are shimmer inks.
And a little bonus - I decided to start using the Wearingeul swatch cards for my Wearingeul inks, so I decided to swatch Starlight on the Wearingeul Puppy Swatch Cards which I had ordered from Atlas.
The cost of the two inks are comparable - you can get a 25ml of Dominant Industry Goryeo Celadon for $20 or 30ml of Wearingeul Dewy Starlight for $22.
Now that I’ve swatched and written with both inks, if I had to pick just one, I’d go with Wearingeul Dewy Starlight over the Dominant Industry Goryeo Celadon. The Starlight is slightly wetter (noticeable during swatching as well as writing), is a bit darker and therefore, easier to read, and it also has more shimmer. Both inks need a wetter pen/nib to really shine and the Lamy Vista showed that it definitely isn’t the right pen for either of these inks.
(Disclaimer: Both inks were purchased at a discount from Atlas Stationers during their Fountain Pen Day event and the swatch cards were ordered on my own, also from Atlas.)