Singapore's fountain pen community is more active than most people realise. Local Facebook groups, Reddit threads, and meetups at stationery shops draw writers who take their ink and paper combinations seriously. If you're part of that world, you already know that the wrong notebook can ruin an otherwise excellent pen.
The same is true in Malaysia — particularly in KL and Penang, where the fountain pen and stationery community is equally engaged. Here's what actually matters for both markets, and what we recommend after years of supplying fountain pen users across Singapore and Malaysia.
Why most notebooks fail fountain pen users
The core issue is paper weight and treatment. Most mass-market notebooks use 70gsm or lighter paper that simply can't absorb liquid ink cleanly. The result is feathering — ink spreading along paper fibres in a way that turns crisp lines into fuzzy edges — and bleedthrough, where the ink soaks to the next page entirely.
Humidity adds another layer that's especially relevant in Southeast Asia. In a high-humidity environment, paper absorbs more moisture from the air, which affects how it handles wet inks. A notebook that performs adequately in a dry climate can feather more noticeably in Singapore or Malaysia, particularly with wetter inks or broader nibs. This is a practical consideration that most notebook reviews written outside the region don't address.
Standard Leuchtturm1917 (80gsm) — reliable for most setups
The standard Leuchtturm1917 notebook uses 80gsm acid-free paper. For fine to medium nibs with standard inks — Pilot Iroshizuku, Diamine, standard Waterman — it performs well. Ghosting is minimal, bleedthrough is rare, and the writing experience is clean.
Where it shows limitations is with heavier ink loads. Broad nibs, wet Japanese pens, highly saturated shading inks, or iron gall inks can cause light feathering on 80gsm paper. It won't ruin your writing, but a serious fountain pen user will notice.
Leuchtturm1917 Edition 120g — built for serious ink use
The Edition 120g is a different proposition entirely. At 120gsm — 50% heavier than the standard paper — it was designed specifically for fountain pens, brush markers, and art journaling. Heavier inks that would feather on standard paper sit cleanly on the 120g surface. Broad nibs, wet inks, even Noodler's bulletproof formulas handle well. The paper is bright white with a smooth finish that shows off ink shading and sheening beautifully.
What makes it particularly relevant for Singapore and Malaysia customers is the art journaling crossover. The 120g paper handles sketching, light watercolour washes, and brush marker use — not just fountain pen ink. For users who combine writing with visual work in the same notebook, it's the right tool. You're not choosing between a writing notebook and a sketchbook. The 120g does both.
It retains everything that makes Leuchtturm1917 worth using — numbered pages, a table of contents, ribbon bookmark, elastic closure — so you're not trading organisation for paper performance.
What to look for when choosing
- Nib size matters: Fine and medium nibs are forgiving. Broad, stub, and flex nibs put more ink on the page and need better paper.
- Check your ink: Drier inks like Platinum Carbon and Pilot Iroshizuku are well-behaved on most paper. Wetter, more saturated inks — Diamine Oxblood, Robert Oster formulas, Noodler's — need heavier stock.
- Humidity is real: In Singapore and Malaysia, slightly heavier paper gives you more margin, especially if your notebooks move between air-conditioned and ambient environments throughout the day.
Buying in Singapore and Malaysia
Both the standard range and the Edition 120g are available at lt1917.com — the official authorised distributor for Singapore and Malaysia. Orders ship to both countries. The Edition 120g is available in A5 dot grid.
For Malaysian buyers, lt1917.com ships directly to Peninsular Malaysia. For retail stockist locations in Malaysia, see our store locator.
Frequently asked questions
What is the best notebook for fountain pens in Singapore and Malaysia?
The Leuchtturm1917 Edition 120g — 120gsm paper that handles wet inks, broad nibs, brush markers, and light watercolour with minimal ghosting and no bleedthrough.
Does humidity affect fountain pen performance in notebooks?
Yes — and this is especially relevant in Singapore and Malaysia. High humidity means paper absorbs more ambient moisture, which increases feathering with wet inks on lighter stock. Go heavier — 90gsm and above gives you more margin.
Does standard Leuchtturm1917 work with fountain pens?
Yes, reliably for fine to medium nibs with standard inks. For wet inks or broad nibs, the Edition 120g is the better choice.
Can the 120g be used for art journaling?
Yes — sketching, light watercolour washes, brush markers, and fountain pen ink all work on the 120g surface. It's the notebook for users who don't want to carry a separate sketchbook.
Can I buy Leuchtturm1917 in Malaysia?
Yes. lt1917.com is the official authorised distributor for both Singapore and Malaysia, with direct shipping to Peninsular Malaysia. Retail stockists are listed on our store locator.