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German quality
For more than 165 years

STABILO fineliners and writing felt-tip pens

Precise writing - made easy

Fineliners are - as the name suggests - particularly suitable for precise writing and drawing. Introduced in 1977, the STABILO point 88 has been the best-selling fineliner in this category in Europe for years and is also often used synonymously with the STABILO brand in Germany. The fineliner with the white edge stripes excites with a wide range of colours and is long lasting thanks to the metal encased tip and is perfect to use with a ruler or stencil. The well-known fineliner is available as a single pen in 65 colours as well as in various sets.


Fineliner with cushioned tip

If you need a fineliner with an even thinner line, then the STABILO SENSOR in fine is the pen for you. It has a metal encased spring-loaded tip which makes it particularly durable and ensures a soft writing feel.

Writing felt-tip pens

The STABILO pointMax and STABILO GREENpoint felt-tip sign pens. They are suitable for colour-intensive writing, sketching and scribbling.

All fineliners & writing felt-tip pens:

In the production of fineliners, several thin plastic strings are "extruded" around a core. This means that the tip consists of numerous small plastic strands between which the ink flows. These strands are held tightly together by a metal frame, resulting in a particularly thin tip. Fineliners are therefore - as the name suggests - particularly suitable for precise writing and drawing.
The thinnest fineliner from STABILO is the SENSOR fine. It has a line thickness of just 0.3 mm and is suitable for particularly fine drawing and writing (for example, for corrections in narrow spaces).
Felt-tip pens are particularly suitable for colour-intensive and expressive writing, sketching and scribbling. In addition, a felt-tip pen provides relatively clear feedback when writing.<span style="letter-spacing: 0px;">&nbsp;</span><div>In the end, however, the use of the respective writing technology is always a question of personal preference. There are also cultural differences: in France, for example, felt-tip pens are much more popular for writing than fineliners, while in Germany it's the other way around for the most part. </div>