The EDC Pen Reinvented: Lumink’s Titanium Fountain Pen Folds, Writes, and Lasts a Lifetime

Pocket pens usually ask for compromise. Full size fountain pens usually ask for commitment. Lumink tries to bridge that divide with a titanium body that collapses to pocket size and unfolds into a full-length pen in seconds. The silhouette is crisp and faceted, with a restrained metallic finish that reads as precision tool before it reads as stationery. It is a concept that feels immediately relevant in a world where everyday tools are expected to be portable, tactile, and visually disciplined.

Much of its appeal comes from how clearly the design serves the use case. The faceted barrel prevents rolling and sharpens the pen’s visual identity, the milled titanium clip reinforces its EDC credentials, and the airtight chamber speaks directly to the realities of carrying a fountain pen on the move. Grade 5 titanium gives the body a durability-to-weight ratio that very few materials can match at this scale. Paired with a German Schmidt nib, the whole package feels engineered around readiness and repeat use. Those choices position Lumink at the intersection of EDC gear and serious writing instruments, which is a tighter niche than it sounds.

Designer: EyeQ

Click Here to Buy Now: $69 $99 (30% off). Hurry, only 16/120 left! Raised over $108,000.

The folding mechanism itself is the main event. It’s not a simple cap that posts on the back; the rear section threads onto the pen, extending the body from a stubby 3.8 inches (96mm) to a very comfortable 5.51 inches (140mm). That pivot point, accented with a brass ring, creates a satisfying mechanical action that feels both precise and robust. This kind of transformability is what draws people to well-made gear. It turns the simple act of preparing to write into a small, tactile ritual, giving the object a character that a static pen, however beautiful, just can’t replicate.

Grade 5 titanium, formally Ti-6Al-4V, produces tensile strength around 950 MPa at a density of 4.43 g/cm3. For non-nerds, it means that it’s harder than steel, while being roughly 40-45% lighter. Aerospace and orthopedic implant manufacturers rely on the same alloy, which tells you the performance tier. Applied to a pen, that combination should produce a carry object that feels substantive in hand without adding real burden to a pocket. Besides, Aluminum dents easily, Titanium resists any form of damage. EyeQ says the Lumink should last you a 100 years. The material, the mechanism, the craftsmanship, it’s all designed to withstand a century of sustained use.

Carrying a fountain pen daily has historically meant accepting certain risks: leaked ink, dried-out nibs, and the grim experience of a pressure-driven blowout mid-flight. Lumink’s threaded isolation system addresses those by sealing the nib section from the reservoir during transport, creating an airtight chamber. The logic is sound: threaded seals operate in environments far more demanding than a shirt pocket. The entire pen is made from metal – not a single plastic part, no glue, nothing that even hints at cost-cutting.

Even the clip uses metal, and features a construction that’s about as carefully considered as the design itself. The clip sits perfectly straight, aligning vertically with the pen to the point of obsessiveness. The reason? Absolute balance. The pen shouldn’t look or feel un-balanced – it should project the confidence that it expects from you, as you use it to write or sign documents. A ball-shaped ceramic insert in the pen clip holds onto book covers, pads, or shirt pockets confidently too, without damaging anything. Slide it into your pocket and the ceramic insert glides smoothly along the fabric, without creasing or damaging it. Meanwhile the clip itself is made from the same titanium as the pen, which means it’ll never bend, warp, or break.

A fancy body is nothing if the writing experience falls flat, so anchoring the pen with a German Schmidt nib was a solid decision. Schmidt is a known quantity in the pen world, a reliable manufacturer whose nibs are used in countless pens far more expensive than this one. It’s the equivalent of a boutique car builder using a proven, well-regarded engine. The nibs are standard, replaceable, and available independently… which means even after a 100 years, you should find yourself with access to more nibs that you can swap in or out whenever you need. The pen’s designed to resist aging.

The three available finishes each cater to a different aesthetic: a raw Sandblasted Titanium for purists, a warm Anodized Gold, and a stealthy PVD Matte Black. The Physical Vapor Deposition coating on the black variant is notably harder than the titanium itself, offering serious scratch resistance, while the sandblasted finish is designed to develop a natural patina with use over time. Early bird pledge tiers started around the $65 mark. You are, after all, paying for Grade 5 Titanium along with Schmidt refills, beyond just the fact that this pen is designed and engineered to perfection. The $65 package includes the pen itself, the Schmidt nib, and a Schneider ink cartridge. You could spring extra for custom engraving, or opt for EyeQ’s leather sleeve for the pen. Personally, a pen that gorgeous shouldn’t be sheathed. It should be flaunted, fidgeted with, and frankly, turned into a heirloom for the next few generations.

Click Here to Buy Now: $69 $99 (30% off). Hurry, only 16/120 left! Raised over $108,000.

The post The EDC Pen Reinvented: Lumink’s Titanium Fountain Pen Folds, Writes, and Lasts a Lifetime first appeared on Yanko Design.

The EDC Pen Reinvented: Lumink’s Titanium Fountain Pen Folds, Writes, and Lasts a Lifetime

Pocket pens usually ask for compromise. Full size fountain pens usually ask for commitment. Lumink tries to bridge that divide with a titanium body that collapses to pocket size and unfolds into a full-length pen in seconds. The silhouette is crisp and faceted, with a restrained metallic finish that reads as precision tool before it reads as stationery. It is a concept that feels immediately relevant in a world where everyday tools are expected to be portable, tactile, and visually disciplined.

Much of its appeal comes from how clearly the design serves the use case. The faceted barrel prevents rolling and sharpens the pen’s visual identity, the milled titanium clip reinforces its EDC credentials, and the airtight chamber speaks directly to the realities of carrying a fountain pen on the move. Grade 5 titanium gives the body a durability-to-weight ratio that very few materials can match at this scale. Paired with a German Schmidt nib, the whole package feels engineered around readiness and repeat use. Those choices position Lumink at the intersection of EDC gear and serious writing instruments, which is a tighter niche than it sounds.

Designer: EyeQ

Click Here to Buy Now: $69 $99 (30% off). Hurry, only 16/120 left! Raised over $108,000.

The folding mechanism itself is the main event. It’s not a simple cap that posts on the back; the rear section threads onto the pen, extending the body from a stubby 3.8 inches (96mm) to a very comfortable 5.51 inches (140mm). That pivot point, accented with a brass ring, creates a satisfying mechanical action that feels both precise and robust. This kind of transformability is what draws people to well-made gear. It turns the simple act of preparing to write into a small, tactile ritual, giving the object a character that a static pen, however beautiful, just can’t replicate.

Grade 5 titanium, formally Ti-6Al-4V, produces tensile strength around 950 MPa at a density of 4.43 g/cm3. For non-nerds, it means that it’s harder than steel, while being roughly 40-45% lighter. Aerospace and orthopedic implant manufacturers rely on the same alloy, which tells you the performance tier. Applied to a pen, that combination should produce a carry object that feels substantive in hand without adding real burden to a pocket. Besides, Aluminum dents easily, Titanium resists any form of damage. EyeQ says the Lumink should last you a 100 years. The material, the mechanism, the craftsmanship, it’s all designed to withstand a century of sustained use.

Carrying a fountain pen daily has historically meant accepting certain risks: leaked ink, dried-out nibs, and the grim experience of a pressure-driven blowout mid-flight. Lumink’s threaded isolation system addresses those by sealing the nib section from the reservoir during transport, creating an airtight chamber. The logic is sound: threaded seals operate in environments far more demanding than a shirt pocket. The entire pen is made from metal – not a single plastic part, no glue, nothing that even hints at cost-cutting.

Even the clip uses metal, and features a construction that’s about as carefully considered as the design itself. The clip sits perfectly straight, aligning vertically with the pen to the point of obsessiveness. The reason? Absolute balance. The pen shouldn’t look or feel un-balanced – it should project the confidence that it expects from you, as you use it to write or sign documents. A ball-shaped ceramic insert in the pen clip holds onto book covers, pads, or shirt pockets confidently too, without damaging anything. Slide it into your pocket and the ceramic insert glides smoothly along the fabric, without creasing or damaging it. Meanwhile the clip itself is made from the same titanium as the pen, which means it’ll never bend, warp, or break.

A fancy body is nothing if the writing experience falls flat, so anchoring the pen with a German Schmidt nib was a solid decision. Schmidt is a known quantity in the pen world, a reliable manufacturer whose nibs are used in countless pens far more expensive than this one. It’s the equivalent of a boutique car builder using a proven, well-regarded engine. The nibs are standard, replaceable, and available independently… which means even after a 100 years, you should find yourself with access to more nibs that you can swap in or out whenever you need. The pen’s designed to resist aging.

The three available finishes each cater to a different aesthetic: a raw Sandblasted Titanium for purists, a warm Anodized Gold, and a stealthy PVD Matte Black. The Physical Vapor Deposition coating on the black variant is notably harder than the titanium itself, offering serious scratch resistance, while the sandblasted finish is designed to develop a natural patina with use over time. Early bird pledge tiers started around the $65 mark. You are, after all, paying for Grade 5 Titanium along with Schmidt refills, beyond just the fact that this pen is designed and engineered to perfection. The $65 package includes the pen itself, the Schmidt nib, and a Schneider ink cartridge. You could spring extra for custom engraving, or opt for EyeQ’s leather sleeve for the pen. Personally, a pen that gorgeous shouldn’t be sheathed. It should be flaunted, fidgeted with, and frankly, turned into a heirloom for the next few generations.

Click Here to Buy Now: $69 $99 (30% off). Hurry, only 16/120 left! Raised over $108,000.

The post The EDC Pen Reinvented: Lumink’s Titanium Fountain Pen Folds, Writes, and Lasts a Lifetime first appeared on Yanko Design.

The EDC Pen Reinvented: Lumink’s Titanium Fountain Pen Folds, Writes, and Lasts a Lifetime

Pocket pens usually ask for compromise. Full size fountain pens usually ask for commitment. Lumink tries to bridge that divide with a titanium body that collapses to pocket size and unfolds into a full-length pen in seconds. The silhouette is crisp and faceted, with a restrained metallic finish that reads as precision tool before it reads as stationery. It is a concept that feels immediately relevant in a world where everyday tools are expected to be portable, tactile, and visually disciplined.

Much of its appeal comes from how clearly the design serves the use case. The faceted barrel prevents rolling and sharpens the pen’s visual identity, the milled titanium clip reinforces its EDC credentials, and the airtight chamber speaks directly to the realities of carrying a fountain pen on the move. Grade 5 titanium gives the body a durability-to-weight ratio that very few materials can match at this scale. Paired with a German Schmidt nib, the whole package feels engineered around readiness and repeat use. Those choices position Lumink at the intersection of EDC gear and serious writing instruments, which is a tighter niche than it sounds.

Designer: EyeQ

Click Here to Buy Now: $69 $99 (30% off). Hurry, only 16/120 left! Raised over $108,000.

The folding mechanism itself is the main event. It’s not a simple cap that posts on the back; the rear section threads onto the pen, extending the body from a stubby 3.8 inches (96mm) to a very comfortable 5.51 inches (140mm). That pivot point, accented with a brass ring, creates a satisfying mechanical action that feels both precise and robust. This kind of transformability is what draws people to well-made gear. It turns the simple act of preparing to write into a small, tactile ritual, giving the object a character that a static pen, however beautiful, just can’t replicate.

Grade 5 titanium, formally Ti-6Al-4V, produces tensile strength around 950 MPa at a density of 4.43 g/cm3. For non-nerds, it means that it’s harder than steel, while being roughly 40-45% lighter. Aerospace and orthopedic implant manufacturers rely on the same alloy, which tells you the performance tier. Applied to a pen, that combination should produce a carry object that feels substantive in hand without adding real burden to a pocket. Besides, Aluminum dents easily, Titanium resists any form of damage. EyeQ says the Lumink should last you a 100 years. The material, the mechanism, the craftsmanship, it’s all designed to withstand a century of sustained use.

Carrying a fountain pen daily has historically meant accepting certain risks: leaked ink, dried-out nibs, and the grim experience of a pressure-driven blowout mid-flight. Lumink’s threaded isolation system addresses those by sealing the nib section from the reservoir during transport, creating an airtight chamber. The logic is sound: threaded seals operate in environments far more demanding than a shirt pocket. The entire pen is made from metal – not a single plastic part, no glue, nothing that even hints at cost-cutting.

Even the clip uses metal, and features a construction that’s about as carefully considered as the design itself. The clip sits perfectly straight, aligning vertically with the pen to the point of obsessiveness. The reason? Absolute balance. The pen shouldn’t look or feel un-balanced – it should project the confidence that it expects from you, as you use it to write or sign documents. A ball-shaped ceramic insert in the pen clip holds onto book covers, pads, or shirt pockets confidently too, without damaging anything. Slide it into your pocket and the ceramic insert glides smoothly along the fabric, without creasing or damaging it. Meanwhile the clip itself is made from the same titanium as the pen, which means it’ll never bend, warp, or break.

A fancy body is nothing if the writing experience falls flat, so anchoring the pen with a German Schmidt nib was a solid decision. Schmidt is a known quantity in the pen world, a reliable manufacturer whose nibs are used in countless pens far more expensive than this one. It’s the equivalent of a boutique car builder using a proven, well-regarded engine. The nibs are standard, replaceable, and available independently… which means even after a 100 years, you should find yourself with access to more nibs that you can swap in or out whenever you need. The pen’s designed to resist aging.

The three available finishes each cater to a different aesthetic: a raw Sandblasted Titanium for purists, a warm Anodized Gold, and a stealthy PVD Matte Black. The Physical Vapor Deposition coating on the black variant is notably harder than the titanium itself, offering serious scratch resistance, while the sandblasted finish is designed to develop a natural patina with use over time. Early bird pledge tiers started around the $65 mark. You are, after all, paying for Grade 5 Titanium along with Schmidt refills, beyond just the fact that this pen is designed and engineered to perfection. The $65 package includes the pen itself, the Schmidt nib, and a Schneider ink cartridge. You could spring extra for custom engraving, or opt for EyeQ’s leather sleeve for the pen. Personally, a pen that gorgeous shouldn’t be sheathed. It should be flaunted, fidgeted with, and frankly, turned into a heirloom for the next few generations.

Click Here to Buy Now: $69 $99 (30% off). Hurry, only 16/120 left! Raised over $108,000.

The post The EDC Pen Reinvented: Lumink’s Titanium Fountain Pen Folds, Writes, and Lasts a Lifetime first appeared on Yanko Design.

The EDC Pen Reinvented: Lumink’s Titanium Fountain Pen Folds, Writes, and Lasts a Lifetime

Pocket pens usually ask for compromise. Full size fountain pens usually ask for commitment. Lumink tries to bridge that divide with a titanium body that collapses to pocket size and unfolds into a full-length pen in seconds. The silhouette is crisp and faceted, with a restrained metallic finish that reads as precision tool before it reads as stationery. It is a concept that feels immediately relevant in a world where everyday tools are expected to be portable, tactile, and visually disciplined.

Much of its appeal comes from how clearly the design serves the use case. The faceted barrel prevents rolling and sharpens the pen’s visual identity, the milled titanium clip reinforces its EDC credentials, and the airtight chamber speaks directly to the realities of carrying a fountain pen on the move. Grade 5 titanium gives the body a durability-to-weight ratio that very few materials can match at this scale. Paired with a German Schmidt nib, the whole package feels engineered around readiness and repeat use. Those choices position Lumink at the intersection of EDC gear and serious writing instruments, which is a tighter niche than it sounds.

Designer: EyeQ

Click Here to Buy Now: $69 $99 (30% off). Hurry, only 16/120 left! Raised over $108,000.

The folding mechanism itself is the main event. It’s not a simple cap that posts on the back; the rear section threads onto the pen, extending the body from a stubby 3.8 inches (96mm) to a very comfortable 5.51 inches (140mm). That pivot point, accented with a brass ring, creates a satisfying mechanical action that feels both precise and robust. This kind of transformability is what draws people to well-made gear. It turns the simple act of preparing to write into a small, tactile ritual, giving the object a character that a static pen, however beautiful, just can’t replicate.

Grade 5 titanium, formally Ti-6Al-4V, produces tensile strength around 950 MPa at a density of 4.43 g/cm3. For non-nerds, it means that it’s harder than steel, while being roughly 40-45% lighter. Aerospace and orthopedic implant manufacturers rely on the same alloy, which tells you the performance tier. Applied to a pen, that combination should produce a carry object that feels substantive in hand without adding real burden to a pocket. Besides, Aluminum dents easily, Titanium resists any form of damage. EyeQ says the Lumink should last you a 100 years. The material, the mechanism, the craftsmanship, it’s all designed to withstand a century of sustained use.

Carrying a fountain pen daily has historically meant accepting certain risks: leaked ink, dried-out nibs, and the grim experience of a pressure-driven blowout mid-flight. Lumink’s threaded isolation system addresses those by sealing the nib section from the reservoir during transport, creating an airtight chamber. The logic is sound: threaded seals operate in environments far more demanding than a shirt pocket. The entire pen is made from metal – not a single plastic part, no glue, nothing that even hints at cost-cutting.

Even the clip uses metal, and features a construction that’s about as carefully considered as the design itself. The clip sits perfectly straight, aligning vertically with the pen to the point of obsessiveness. The reason? Absolute balance. The pen shouldn’t look or feel un-balanced – it should project the confidence that it expects from you, as you use it to write or sign documents. A ball-shaped ceramic insert in the pen clip holds onto book covers, pads, or shirt pockets confidently too, without damaging anything. Slide it into your pocket and the ceramic insert glides smoothly along the fabric, without creasing or damaging it. Meanwhile the clip itself is made from the same titanium as the pen, which means it’ll never bend, warp, or break.

A fancy body is nothing if the writing experience falls flat, so anchoring the pen with a German Schmidt nib was a solid decision. Schmidt is a known quantity in the pen world, a reliable manufacturer whose nibs are used in countless pens far more expensive than this one. It’s the equivalent of a boutique car builder using a proven, well-regarded engine. The nibs are standard, replaceable, and available independently… which means even after a 100 years, you should find yourself with access to more nibs that you can swap in or out whenever you need. The pen’s designed to resist aging.

The three available finishes each cater to a different aesthetic: a raw Sandblasted Titanium for purists, a warm Anodized Gold, and a stealthy PVD Matte Black. The Physical Vapor Deposition coating on the black variant is notably harder than the titanium itself, offering serious scratch resistance, while the sandblasted finish is designed to develop a natural patina with use over time. Early bird pledge tiers started around the $65 mark. You are, after all, paying for Grade 5 Titanium along with Schmidt refills, beyond just the fact that this pen is designed and engineered to perfection. The $65 package includes the pen itself, the Schmidt nib, and a Schneider ink cartridge. You could spring extra for custom engraving, or opt for EyeQ’s leather sleeve for the pen. Personally, a pen that gorgeous shouldn’t be sheathed. It should be flaunted, fidgeted with, and frankly, turned into a heirloom for the next few generations.

Click Here to Buy Now: $69 $99 (30% off). Hurry, only 16/120 left! Raised over $108,000.

The post The EDC Pen Reinvented: Lumink’s Titanium Fountain Pen Folds, Writes, and Lasts a Lifetime first appeared on Yanko Design.

The EDC Pen Reinvented: Lumink’s Titanium Fountain Pen Folds, Writes, and Lasts a Lifetime

Pocket pens usually ask for compromise. Full size fountain pens usually ask for commitment. Lumink tries to bridge that divide with a titanium body that collapses to pocket size and unfolds into a full-length pen in seconds. The silhouette is crisp and faceted, with a restrained metallic finish that reads as precision tool before it reads as stationery. It is a concept that feels immediately relevant in a world where everyday tools are expected to be portable, tactile, and visually disciplined.

Much of its appeal comes from how clearly the design serves the use case. The faceted barrel prevents rolling and sharpens the pen’s visual identity, the milled titanium clip reinforces its EDC credentials, and the airtight chamber speaks directly to the realities of carrying a fountain pen on the move. Grade 5 titanium gives the body a durability-to-weight ratio that very few materials can match at this scale. Paired with a German Schmidt nib, the whole package feels engineered around readiness and repeat use. Those choices position Lumink at the intersection of EDC gear and serious writing instruments, which is a tighter niche than it sounds.

Designer: EyeQ

Click Here to Buy Now: $69 $99 (30% off). Hurry, only 16/120 left! Raised over $108,000.

The folding mechanism itself is the main event. It’s not a simple cap that posts on the back; the rear section threads onto the pen, extending the body from a stubby 3.8 inches (96mm) to a very comfortable 5.51 inches (140mm). That pivot point, accented with a brass ring, creates a satisfying mechanical action that feels both precise and robust. This kind of transformability is what draws people to well-made gear. It turns the simple act of preparing to write into a small, tactile ritual, giving the object a character that a static pen, however beautiful, just can’t replicate.

Grade 5 titanium, formally Ti-6Al-4V, produces tensile strength around 950 MPa at a density of 4.43 g/cm3. For non-nerds, it means that it’s harder than steel, while being roughly 40-45% lighter. Aerospace and orthopedic implant manufacturers rely on the same alloy, which tells you the performance tier. Applied to a pen, that combination should produce a carry object that feels substantive in hand without adding real burden to a pocket. Besides, Aluminum dents easily, Titanium resists any form of damage. EyeQ says the Lumink should last you a 100 years. The material, the mechanism, the craftsmanship, it’s all designed to withstand a century of sustained use.

Carrying a fountain pen daily has historically meant accepting certain risks: leaked ink, dried-out nibs, and the grim experience of a pressure-driven blowout mid-flight. Lumink’s threaded isolation system addresses those by sealing the nib section from the reservoir during transport, creating an airtight chamber. The logic is sound: threaded seals operate in environments far more demanding than a shirt pocket. The entire pen is made from metal – not a single plastic part, no glue, nothing that even hints at cost-cutting.

Even the clip uses metal, and features a construction that’s about as carefully considered as the design itself. The clip sits perfectly straight, aligning vertically with the pen to the point of obsessiveness. The reason? Absolute balance. The pen shouldn’t look or feel un-balanced – it should project the confidence that it expects from you, as you use it to write or sign documents. A ball-shaped ceramic insert in the pen clip holds onto book covers, pads, or shirt pockets confidently too, without damaging anything. Slide it into your pocket and the ceramic insert glides smoothly along the fabric, without creasing or damaging it. Meanwhile the clip itself is made from the same titanium as the pen, which means it’ll never bend, warp, or break.

A fancy body is nothing if the writing experience falls flat, so anchoring the pen with a German Schmidt nib was a solid decision. Schmidt is a known quantity in the pen world, a reliable manufacturer whose nibs are used in countless pens far more expensive than this one. It’s the equivalent of a boutique car builder using a proven, well-regarded engine. The nibs are standard, replaceable, and available independently… which means even after a 100 years, you should find yourself with access to more nibs that you can swap in or out whenever you need. The pen’s designed to resist aging.

The three available finishes each cater to a different aesthetic: a raw Sandblasted Titanium for purists, a warm Anodized Gold, and a stealthy PVD Matte Black. The Physical Vapor Deposition coating on the black variant is notably harder than the titanium itself, offering serious scratch resistance, while the sandblasted finish is designed to develop a natural patina with use over time. Early bird pledge tiers started around the $65 mark. You are, after all, paying for Grade 5 Titanium along with Schmidt refills, beyond just the fact that this pen is designed and engineered to perfection. The $65 package includes the pen itself, the Schmidt nib, and a Schneider ink cartridge. You could spring extra for custom engraving, or opt for EyeQ’s leather sleeve for the pen. Personally, a pen that gorgeous shouldn’t be sheathed. It should be flaunted, fidgeted with, and frankly, turned into a heirloom for the next few generations.

Click Here to Buy Now: $69 $99 (30% off). Hurry, only 16/120 left! Raised over $108,000.

The post The EDC Pen Reinvented: Lumink’s Titanium Fountain Pen Folds, Writes, and Lasts a Lifetime first appeared on Yanko Design.

The EDC Pen Reinvented: Lumink’s Titanium Fountain Pen Folds, Writes, and Lasts a Lifetime

Pocket pens usually ask for compromise. Full size fountain pens usually ask for commitment. Lumink tries to bridge that divide with a titanium body that collapses to pocket size and unfolds into a full-length pen in seconds. The silhouette is crisp and faceted, with a restrained metallic finish that reads as precision tool before it reads as stationery. It is a concept that feels immediately relevant in a world where everyday tools are expected to be portable, tactile, and visually disciplined.

Much of its appeal comes from how clearly the design serves the use case. The faceted barrel prevents rolling and sharpens the pen’s visual identity, the milled titanium clip reinforces its EDC credentials, and the airtight chamber speaks directly to the realities of carrying a fountain pen on the move. Grade 5 titanium gives the body a durability-to-weight ratio that very few materials can match at this scale. Paired with a German Schmidt nib, the whole package feels engineered around readiness and repeat use. Those choices position Lumink at the intersection of EDC gear and serious writing instruments, which is a tighter niche than it sounds.

Designer: EyeQ

Click Here to Buy Now: $69 $99 (30% off). Hurry, only 16/120 left! Raised over $108,000.

The folding mechanism itself is the main event. It’s not a simple cap that posts on the back; the rear section threads onto the pen, extending the body from a stubby 3.8 inches (96mm) to a very comfortable 5.51 inches (140mm). That pivot point, accented with a brass ring, creates a satisfying mechanical action that feels both precise and robust. This kind of transformability is what draws people to well-made gear. It turns the simple act of preparing to write into a small, tactile ritual, giving the object a character that a static pen, however beautiful, just can’t replicate.

Grade 5 titanium, formally Ti-6Al-4V, produces tensile strength around 950 MPa at a density of 4.43 g/cm3. For non-nerds, it means that it’s harder than steel, while being roughly 40-45% lighter. Aerospace and orthopedic implant manufacturers rely on the same alloy, which tells you the performance tier. Applied to a pen, that combination should produce a carry object that feels substantive in hand without adding real burden to a pocket. Besides, Aluminum dents easily, Titanium resists any form of damage. EyeQ says the Lumink should last you a 100 years. The material, the mechanism, the craftsmanship, it’s all designed to withstand a century of sustained use.

Carrying a fountain pen daily has historically meant accepting certain risks: leaked ink, dried-out nibs, and the grim experience of a pressure-driven blowout mid-flight. Lumink’s threaded isolation system addresses those by sealing the nib section from the reservoir during transport, creating an airtight chamber. The logic is sound: threaded seals operate in environments far more demanding than a shirt pocket. The entire pen is made from metal – not a single plastic part, no glue, nothing that even hints at cost-cutting.

Even the clip uses metal, and features a construction that’s about as carefully considered as the design itself. The clip sits perfectly straight, aligning vertically with the pen to the point of obsessiveness. The reason? Absolute balance. The pen shouldn’t look or feel un-balanced – it should project the confidence that it expects from you, as you use it to write or sign documents. A ball-shaped ceramic insert in the pen clip holds onto book covers, pads, or shirt pockets confidently too, without damaging anything. Slide it into your pocket and the ceramic insert glides smoothly along the fabric, without creasing or damaging it. Meanwhile the clip itself is made from the same titanium as the pen, which means it’ll never bend, warp, or break.

A fancy body is nothing if the writing experience falls flat, so anchoring the pen with a German Schmidt nib was a solid decision. Schmidt is a known quantity in the pen world, a reliable manufacturer whose nibs are used in countless pens far more expensive than this one. It’s the equivalent of a boutique car builder using a proven, well-regarded engine. The nibs are standard, replaceable, and available independently… which means even after a 100 years, you should find yourself with access to more nibs that you can swap in or out whenever you need. The pen’s designed to resist aging.

The three available finishes each cater to a different aesthetic: a raw Sandblasted Titanium for purists, a warm Anodized Gold, and a stealthy PVD Matte Black. The Physical Vapor Deposition coating on the black variant is notably harder than the titanium itself, offering serious scratch resistance, while the sandblasted finish is designed to develop a natural patina with use over time. Early bird pledge tiers started around the $65 mark. You are, after all, paying for Grade 5 Titanium along with Schmidt refills, beyond just the fact that this pen is designed and engineered to perfection. The $65 package includes the pen itself, the Schmidt nib, and a Schneider ink cartridge. You could spring extra for custom engraving, or opt for EyeQ’s leather sleeve for the pen. Personally, a pen that gorgeous shouldn’t be sheathed. It should be flaunted, fidgeted with, and frankly, turned into a heirloom for the next few generations.

Click Here to Buy Now: $69 $99 (30% off). Hurry, only 16/120 left! Raised over $108,000.

The post The EDC Pen Reinvented: Lumink’s Titanium Fountain Pen Folds, Writes, and Lasts a Lifetime first appeared on Yanko Design.

This All-In-One Ryzen MiniPC Packs 12 Ports, 4.5-Inch Display, and 15W Wireless Charging

Your desk has too much stuff on it. A mini PC sits next to a USB hub, which sits next to a wireless charging pad, which sits next to a dock that barely has enough ports anyway. You bought each piece to solve a specific problem, and together they created a new one: a workspace that looks like a Best Buy exploded across your desktop. Cable management becomes a part-time job. Every device needs its own power brick, its own real estate, its own moment of your attention when something inevitably stops working.

ViewDock Gen2 collapses that entire ecosystem into a single 175mm aluminum block. The Hong Kong-based team designed a vertical mini PC that integrates a 4.5-inch adjustable display, 15W Qi wireless charging, and a full 12-port I/O layout into a form factor that weighs 2.3 pounds and takes up less desk space than a coffee mug. Inside, AMD Ryzen processors from the 6000, 7000, and 8000 series (including options like the 6900HX, 7735H, 7640H, 7840H, 7940H, and 8845H) handle everything from productivity to light gaming, with boost speeds reaching up to 4.9GHz. ViewDock hasn’t published which specific processor ships with each configuration, and performance gaps exist between these chips, so you’ll want to confirm your exact SKU before backing. Dual M.2 slots support up to 4TB of combined storage, and units start at a discounted $639 during the Kickstarter campaign.

Designer: ViewDock

Click Here to Buy Now: $639 $1079 (41% off) Hurry! Only 185 units left.

The hinged 4.5-inch display on top of the chassis deserves its own paragraph because it represents a genuine design fork in how you interact with a desktop computer. Most secondary displays are external accessories you buy separately, mount awkwardly, and power independently. ViewDock built one directly into the machine and made it adjustable through 90 degrees, so you can angle it toward your eyeline or fold it flat when you don’t need it. The panel outputs at 480 x 854 pixels, which sounds low until you remember this is a dashboard, not a workstation monitor. You’re using it for system stats, chat windows, calendars, or media previews while your main displays handle the heavy lifting. The screen powers on and off automatically with the system, syncs without configuration, and eliminates yet another cable from your setup. It’s a small decision that compounds across daily use.

The aluminum alloy chassis does more than look good, though it does look good. Most mini PCs default to plastic because it’s cheap and easy to mold, and most mini PCs run hot because plastic doesn’t dissipate heat well and manufacturers cheap out on cooling. ViewDock went the opposite direction. The precision-machined aluminum body acts as a passive heatsink, pulling warmth away from internal components and spreading it across a larger surface area. Inside, a 4000 RPM fan with a vapor chamber design moves air through optimized vents on all sides, keeping the CPU between 30 and 45 degrees Celsius even under sustained workloads. That thermal engineering is the reason the G2 can pack this much performance into a 51mm-tall enclosure without throttling or sounding like a jet engine. You don’t see it, but you benefit from it every time the system stays quiet during a render or stays stable during an overnight compile.

The I/O layout splits across front and rear panels, and ViewDock clearly thought about which ports you reach for often versus which ones you set and forget. The front gives you two USB-A 3.0 ports, one USB-C, a 3.5mm audio jack, and a power button. The rear houses the 40Gbps USB4 Type-C port, HDMI 2.1, DisplayPort 1.4, two more USB-A ports, dual 2.5G Ethernet jacks, and the DC power input. All video outputs support 4K at 120Hz, and you can drive three external monitors simultaneously while using the built-in display as a fourth screen. That’s a legitimate triple-monitor workstation powered by something you can fit in a backpack. The wireless charging pad on top supports the universal Qi standard at 15W, so any compatible phone or earbuds drops onto the surface and charges without fumbling for a cable.

ViewDock also built the G2 to be user-upgradeable, which is increasingly rare in this product category. The chassis opens to reveal two DDR5 SODIMM slots that accept up to 64GB of RAM at 4800MHz or 5600MHz, and two M.2 2280 slots that support SATA3, PCIe 3.0/4.0, and NVMe protocols. Each SSD slot can take a 2TB drive, giving you 4TB of total storage if you max it out. That kind of expandability extends the useful life of the machine well beyond its initial configuration, which matters when you’re spending $600 to $1,200 on a desktop system. WiFi 6 and Bluetooth 5.2 come standard, and the unit ships with a Windows 10/11 trial pre-installed, though it’s fully Linux-compatible if you’d rather run Ubuntu.

The G2 launched on Kickstarter in March 2026 with four main configurations. The Creative Edition starts at $639 with base specs, while the 16GB RAM with 512GB storage model sits at $889. Step up to 16GB with 1TB storage for $999, or go all the way to 32GB with 1TB for $1,229. Those prices represent 40 to 50 percent discounts off projected retail, which is typical for crowdfunding campaigns. ViewDock plans to ship all units in August 2026, with expected delivery in September. Shipping costs vary by region, starting at $20 for Asia and scaling up to $50 for three-unit orders to the US or Canada. The team successfully delivered their first-generation ViewDock docking station to backers last year, which gives this campaign more credibility than most hardware Kickstarters manage on day one.

Click Here to Buy Now: $639 $1079 (41% off) Hurry! Only 185 units left.

The post This All-In-One Ryzen MiniPC Packs 12 Ports, 4.5-Inch Display, and 15W Wireless Charging first appeared on Yanko Design.

Dhruv Agarwwal’s Blur Coffee Table Turns an Optical Illusion Into Furniture

Dhruv Agarwwal’s Blur coffee table is named for what it does to your eyes. The base is a structure of layered steel mesh, each plane sitting close enough to the next that their overlapping grids produce a moire effect across the surface, a shifting, shimmering interference pattern that changes character with every degree of movement from the viewer. The red Meena enamel coating, applied by hand by artisans in Moradabad, intensifies the effect: the slight inconsistencies of hand-application mean the color itself is uneven, denser in some areas, thinner in others, feeding directly into the optical noise.

Above the mesh base floats a frosted acrylic tabletop, thick and rectangular, diffusing rather than reflecting light. The pairing of the two materials produces a coherent visual argument: both surfaces refuse to be fully legible. One shimmers and shifts; the other glows and obscures. Together they make a table that rewards extended looking in a way that polished stone or clear glass simply cannot.

Designer: Dhruv Agarwwal

Meena enamel is a craft with serious heritage. Originating in Rajasthan and practiced extensively across Moradabad, it involves fusing powdered glass onto metal at high temperatures, a process that demands precision and repetition and produces a surface that no two artisans will render identically. Agarwwal worked with local craftspeople to develop a thicker enamel coat than the technique typically yields, which is a meaningful technical decision because thickness changes how the enamel interacts with light, giving it volume and depth rather than lying flat against the wire. On a steel mesh substrate, that depth becomes optical complexity. The wire catches the enamel unevenly, creating micro-variations across thousands of small cells, and those variations are exactly what makes the moire pattern feel alive rather than mechanical.

The Moire effect emerges when two or more repetitive patterns overlap at a slight offset or angle, producing a third, emergent pattern at a much larger scale. It is the same phenomenon that makes a window screen look striped when photographed, or causes two chain-link fences to generate waves when viewed at an angle. In Blur, the layered mesh panels are the mechanism, and the enamel coating is the amplifier. At 112 x 56 x 45 cm, the table is coffee table scale, low and rectangular, which means the base sits in the viewer’s sightline rather than below it. You look across the mesh, not down at it, which is precisely the angle at which moire interference is most pronounced.

What separates Blur from the broad category of studio furniture that deploys traditional craft as surface-level ornamentation is that the Meena enamel technique is load-bearing to the concept, not decorative dressing applied after the fact. The irregularity is the point. A machine-applied coating would produce a uniform surface, and a uniform surface would kill the moire entirely, flattening the mesh into something predictable and inert. Agarwwal needed the hand, the slight inconsistency, the human error baked into a centuries-old process, to make the optical effect function. The craft and the perceptual phenomenon are causally linked, not just thematically paired, and that is a genuinely uncommon design position to arrive at and execute convincingly at furniture scale.

The post Dhruv Agarwwal’s Blur Coffee Table Turns an Optical Illusion Into Furniture first appeared on Yanko Design.

LG Just Invented a New Metal to Build the Lightest 16-Inch OLED Laptop of 2026

Every laptop manufacturer promises lighter builds, but most of them cheat. They shrink the battery, strip out ports, swap metal for plastic, or just make the screen smaller and call it progress. Real weight reduction without compromise requires inventing something new at the molecular level, which is exactly what LG did. The company spent the last year developing Aerominum, an in-house engineered alloy designed to be simultaneously lighter and stronger than the magnesium chassis that defined the gram line for a decade. The result is a 16-inch laptop with a 120Hz OLED display that weighs under 1.2 kilograms, a figure that sounds like a typo until you actually pick one up.

LG introduced three new gram models this week, all built on the Aerominum chassis: a 14-inch variant with Intel Panther Lake, a 17-inch with 32GB of RAM and an optional NVIDIA RTX 5050 GPU, and the headliner gram Pro 16. The Pro 16 pairs its sub-1.2kg weight with a 2,880 x 1,800 OLED panel running at 120Hz, powered by Intel’s latest Core Ultra processors. LG claims the new alloy meets military-grade durability standards while delivering scratch resistance that previous gram models couldn’t match. If the engineering holds up under real-world use, this could finally be the laptop that breaks the portability ceiling for 16-inch displays.

Designer: LG

Aerominum replaces the magnesium alloy LG has used across the gram lineup since 2015, when the series first launched internationally. The new material uses what LG calls an “aeroplate structure,” a term that suggests internal geometry optimization rather than just a change in chemical composition. The company also applies a refined atelier brushing technique to the surface, delivering a metallic finish that looks premium without adding the typical weight penalty of anodized aluminum. The scratch resistance claim addresses one of the most consistent criticisms leveled at ultralight laptops over the years: magnesium chassis tend to show wear quickly, and previous gram models were no exception. Whether Aerominum actually solves that problem will depend on how it holds up after six months in a backpack, but the intent is clear.

The gram Pro 16 carries a 2,880 x 1,800 OLED display with a 120Hz refresh rate, a resolution LG markets as WQXGA+. The OLED panel is the differentiator here. LG’s 17-inch model uses an IPS display, which keeps costs down but sacrifices contrast and color depth. The Pro 16 gets the premium screen treatment, and pairing that with a 120Hz refresh rate makes it viable for light creative work and high-refresh browsing without needing discrete graphics. Intel’s Core Ultra processors handle the computing side, though LG hasn’t disclosed specific SKUs yet. The company does confirm support for both on-device AI (via LG’s gram chat powered by EXAONE 3.5 sLLM) and Microsoft Copilot+ PC functionality, which requires certain minimum performance thresholds that narrow down the chip options.

Weighing under 1.2 kilograms puts the gram Pro 16 in the same weight class as most 13-inch ultrabooks, which is absurd for a machine with a 16-inch OLED display. For context, Apple’s 13-inch MacBook Air with M3 weighs 1.24 kg. The Dell XPS 16 sits closer to 2.1 kg, and even Lenovo’s ThinkPad X1 Carbon (a 14-inch machine) weighs 1.19 kg. LG has been chasing this kind of weight advantage since the gram line launched over a decade ago, and Aerominum is the material innovation that finally closed the gap.

The gram Pro 16 will compete directly with premium Windows ultrabooks from Dell, Lenovo, and ASUS, all of which have been adding OLED options to their flagship models over the past two years. LG’s advantage is weight. The weakness, historically, has been GPU performance and pricing. The Pro 16 skips discrete graphics entirely, which will limit its appeal to anyone doing serious video editing or 3D work. Pricing hasn’t been announced yet, but previous gram Pro models launched at premium price points that undercut Apple while overshooting most Windows competitors. If LG can keep the Pro 16 under $2,000, it becomes a legitimate alternative to the MacBook Pro 16. If it creeps past that threshold, the weight advantage starts to feel like an expensive novelty.

The post LG Just Invented a New Metal to Build the Lightest 16-Inch OLED Laptop of 2026 first appeared on Yanko Design.

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70 Mile Range, 110 Nm of Torque, and a One-Click Wheelie. Meet the AOTOS Flux X26

The road to electric adoption has always needed two things, logic and emotion. Logic is easy to find in March 2026, with petrol prices climbing high enough to make every refill feel faintly offensive. Emotion is harder to engineer, yet it matters just as much. People want efficiency, but they also want acceleration, style, and the small thrill of riding something that feels alive beneath them. The products that close the gap between those two instincts are the ones worth paying attention to.

The AOTOS Flux X26 enters that landscape with a compelling mix of utility, performance, and fun. A claimed 70 mile range, from city streets to desert trails, supports daily commuting and longer urban detours. A 0 to 20 mph time of 4.9 seconds gives it a brisk, responsive character. The one click wheelie function adds an unmistakably playful edge, with specialized motion control algorithms allowing riders to safely experience one-wheel maneuvers at the touch of a button. AOTOS launched the Flux X26 on Kickstarter this March, positioning it as the officially recognized world’s first wheelie capable light electric moto.

Designer: AOTOS

Click Here to Buy Now: $1199 $1699 (29% off). Hurry, only 85/100 left! Raised over $498,000.

The frame completely abandons round, retro shapes in favor of a sleek, one-piece aluminum alloy construction with sharp, parametric lines. That futuristic mecha design philosophy extends from the physical vehicle to the retail space, app interface, and packaging. The ambient lighting system adds presence in urban environments at night without reading as decorative afterthought. The overall silhouette sits closer to a motocross bike than a commuter bicycle, which fits well with the fact that the Flux X26’s designed for those impromptu adventure-trips and thrill-chasing weekends, aside from being your reliable weekday in-city commuter.

The Pro variant delivers 2000W of peak power at a 1500W rated output (the regular version offers 1200W of peak power, rated for 750W output), strictly Class 2 compliant for legal road use, paired with 110Nm of instant torque that enables it to climb steep gradients up to 25% with ease. From a standstill, it hits 20 mph in 4.9 seconds, translating to immediately responsive performance in city traffic and on open trails. The one click wheelie function uses proprietary motion control algorithms that cut the physical effort required by roughly 20%, making the maneuver genuinely accessible. The Class 2 rating keeps the X26 street legal across most US states while the peak output covers the off road brief. Both variants share 20×4.0 inch fat tires, dual hydraulic suspension, and hydraulic disc brakes front and rear.

AOTOS built FLUX OS, a proprietary intelligent ecosystem that treats the Flux X26 as a mobile terminal, featuring triple anti theft security through integrated wireless connection and GPS, sensorless unlocking, and a high definition TFT smart screen. Through frequent OTA updates, the Flux X26 functions as a living device that evolves over time, improving after purchase rather than arriving as a fixed product. The 5.5 inch full color TFT display handles speed, ride mode, range, warnings, and GPS positioning, with turn by turn navigation synced from the rider’s phone. The Pro variant adds 4G connectivity alongside Bluetooth, giving the bike a live data link independent of the rider’s phone range. Both tiers benefit from the same software architecture, with the Pro carrying the more robust hardware layer on top.

An oversized battery provides a 70 mile exploration radius, from city streets to desert trails, putting the X26 at the more capable end of its category for the price. Urban riders cover the majority of their weekly riding without a midday recharge, and for weekend exploration the radius reaches distances that feel genuinely adventurous. The battery holds an IPX7 water resistance rating on the Pro variant, with IPX5 covering the rest of the vehicle. AOTOS backs ownership with over 100 after sales service points across the United States, adhering to strict Class 2 and safety certifications. The 330 lb maximum load capacity confirms the X26 as a serious daily use machine.

Super Early Bird Kickstarter pricing opens at $1,199 for the standard Flux X26 and $1,599 for the Pro, against MSRPs of $1,699 and $2,299 respectively. First units are scheduled to ship in May 2026, a window tight enough to signal genuine production readiness. The X26 Pro was shown at CES 2026 in Las Vegas ahead of the campaign, putting the hardware in front of an audience that scrutinizes product claims closely. Founded in 2016, AOTOS has built its core R&D team from engineers specializing in motion control, AI algorithms, and smart systems. At this price, with a design that commits fully to its aesthetic and a fully fledged software that just gets better with time thanks to OTA updates, the Flux X26 is one of the more innovatively gorgeous electric two wheelers on Kickstarter right now.

Click Here to Buy Now: $1199 $1699 (29% off). Hurry, only 85/100 left! Raised over $498,000.

The post 70 Mile Range, 110 Nm of Torque, and a One-Click Wheelie. Meet the AOTOS Flux X26 first appeared on Yanko Design.