Gel Pens / Rollerball Pens

Office Supplies Designed for ADHD Planning

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  • Boba Bear Gel Pen

    Boba Bear Gel Pen

    Boba Bear Gel Pen

    $3.19
    Sale price  $3.19 Regular price  $3.99

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Gel pen or rollerball pen — what’s the actual difference?
A: They’re easy to mix up, but the core difference is the ink. Gel pens use a thick, pigment-based ink that sits on top of the paper, giving you bolder, more opaque colors — perfect for white or dark paper. Rollerball pens use a water-based liquid ink that soaks into the paper, so they feel smoother and more fluid, kind of like a fountain pen without the maintenance.
Q: Why do people obsess over Japanese gel pens?
A: Honestly, the Japanese just don’t tolerate scratchy writing. Brands like Zebra, Pilot, and Uni have spent decades refining ball sizes, ink viscosity, and tip mechanisms to a point where a ¥150 pen writes like a dream. Add to that a borderline insane catalog of colors and limited editions, and it’s no surprise people collect them the way others collect sneakers.
Q: What’s the best way to store a gel pen collection?
A: Keep them flat, not standing nib-down, because gravity can push too much ink into the tip and cause leaks. Acrylic pen drawers or a simple stationery pouch work perfectly. The main enemy is heat — don’t leave them in a hot car or near a sunny window, or the ink might start burping.
Q: What tip size should I pick — 0.38, 0.5, or 0.7mm?
A: It’s totally personal, but here’s my rule of thumb: 0.38mm is for tiny planners, detailed doodles, or if you just love a super crisp, needle-thin line. 0.5mm is the everyday sweet spot — fine enough for neat notes, bold enough to read easily. 0.7mm is for signatures, greeting cards, or when you really want that buttery-smooth glide and don’t mind a thicker stroke.