🖤 Elevate your art with precision and permanence — don’t let your lines fade into the background!
The COPIC Multiliner SP 0.3mm is a professional-grade fineliner featuring waterproof, pigment-based ink housed in a sleek brushed aluminum body. Designed for artists and creatives, it offers ultra-fine precision and archival quality, making it perfect for detailed artwork, design, and coloring projects.
Brand | Copic |
Model Number | MLSP-03 |
Colour | Black |
Product Dimensions | 13.34 x 1.27 x 1.14 cm; 6.8 g |
Material | Plastic |
Special Features | Waterproof, Pigment Based Ink, Archival and Photocopy safe |
Item Weight | 6.8 g |
H**L
Super pen
These are great sketching pens, this is a good 3mm, which is great for filling in black areas or items in the foreground. these have fast become my favourite art pens.
P**R
Just what I needed
0.3 and 0.5 pens were perfect nice nib good flow .Did buy a 0.1 but found that tooo fine and scratchy.
D**N
It’s a pen a very nice one
Great fineliner and very happy with the refill ability and changing out the nibs. They have become my daily driver. Would recommend if you use Dubliners allot. Sizing does seem to vary slightly from other company standards.
P**5
Great quality, and worth the money
Great quality linemarker. a little more expensive than other perhaps, but ive found all the SP range to be excellent and have these pens in various gauges.Would recommend to anybody for technical drawing as well as sketching and inking Copic coloured art.
B**7
Not the cheapest... but you get what you pay for.
Really good quality and sturdy pen. Parts can be replaced such as the nib and ink cartridges. The nibs appear quite difficult to find. I ended up paying for a whole new pen. Anyone else finding this?
N**L
Multiliner Ink Marker
A very handy item for those who undertake handy craft work.Nice clear, steady lines.A good product at a fair price.
B**N
Too expensive
As before with my other review. Nice pens but just too expensive for what they are & a little uncomfortable to draw with over a prolonged period of time if u do this for a living. They are durable but hard & cold & bruise my fingertips after a solid days work at the board. I can only state my own preference here because it depends on your own use what u make of these, but I prefer cheaper alternatives that I actually find more comfortable to draw with & that offer no loss of quality in line for their affordability. To each their own...
R**S
Not bad pens but concept hampered by spares cost
These are nice pens — I have a few nib sizes and I appreciate the aluminium bodies and the way you can easily change the nibs and cartridges with no mess and minimum fuss (it’s worth getting copic’s little tool specifically for this purpose).My only issue is that I thought I’d be saving money, as well as reducing my plastic waste, by switching to these SP models rather than buying the disposable copic multiliners that I was using fir illustration work for most of last year.The problem is that the tips — especially the finer ones — wear down very quickly and sometime before the cartridge even runs out. Therefor you end up buying a new cartridge and nib set in around the same time as you would be replacing the disposable pen — if not before — and the cost of these parts, with shipping (at least where I live), is actually slightly more than the entire disposable version of the pen, which I can pick up locally with no shipping cost.Then, you’re still throwing away plastic nib and empty plastic cartridge, so your contribution to landfill is only slightly less than it was using the disposables.I’ve tried refilling the cartridges with rotring isograph ink and they always leak afterwards.That said, they are still that bit nicer to hold and use than plastic-bodied pens from a tactile standpoint, and the ink is dark and doesn’t blot or spot in the point of first contact (on Bristol board) like I’ve found to happen with microns and pitt pens.
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