🎨 Elevate Your Art Game with Copic's Pale Fruit Pink!
The Copic Sketch Marker in Pale Fruit Pink (SM-E000S) is a versatile, lightweight marker designed for artists seeking high-quality, vibrant colors. With a replaceable tip and ethanol-based, non-toxic ink, it’s perfect for a variety of creative projects, including airbrushing. Its smooth grip and precision chisel point make it an essential tool for both professionals and hobbyists alike.
Manufacturer | Copic Marker |
Brand | Copic |
Item Weight | 0.6 ounces |
Product Dimensions | 5.9 x 0.6 x 0.45 inches |
Item model number | SM-E000S |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Color | E000 Pale Fruit Pink |
Grip Type | Smooth |
Material Type | Plastic |
Number of Items | 1 |
Size | 1 Count (Pack of 1) |
Point Type | Chisel |
Line Size | 1.0_1.9mm |
Ink Color | Pink |
Manufacturer Part Number | SM-E000S |
J**S
Big win!
Everybody wins when using a Copic marker. Highly recommend. Smooth application. Dries quickly. Lots of colors to choose from.
R**A
Works great
Nice color
A**1
Very nice marker
Great blue color. Very saturated and not as easy to blend for that reason. But it is true to its swatch on the website.
S**O
Marcador Copic
Exelente!
E**L
Beautiful bright pink!!
This marker is a beautiful color. The perfect hot pink/neon pink! Being a Copic marker, it is easy to use, blend, and is a great value (as you can refill it once you use the ink up). It was wrapped well and had no issues when I received it. A great way to start your Copic collection!!
J**O
Delivered with care
This one was good no problems with it satisfied
J**1
Nice but darker than cap
Nice marker.I would have given 5 stars if the color was like the cap. Its actually much dark, especially after it dries
M**I
True to cap-color
The color of the ink is exactly the same as the color on the cap. I like to know the color I’m reaching for is going to come out as promised. As a pleasant little side-detail, even the name of the colors they choose makes sense!The brush-tip is smooth with a bit of bounce. It releases the ink precisely and according to slight pressure, a predictable flow that gives me exact control of where I want the ink to go.This marker is alcohol based and dries very fast - once the ink is on the paper, blending has to happen right then (you better know your shading-or blending color before this !) to be seamless and smooth.The colorless blending marker doesn’t help with blending so much, it pushes the color I want to blend with away, making it lighter - great for highlites.Until the beginning of 2018, when I discovered you-tube tutorials and realized how much I wanted to learn fashion illustration, I had only dabbled in silk painting and then, later, I squeezed in a few months of old-master-oil-technique. My experience/knowledge of markers (and any graphic art supplies) was limited by felt-tips from childhood and assorted colors from the 99 Cent store - those things and markers like this one are not at all related, not even like a four times removed cousin.I wish it wasn’t true that when it comes to markers, you get what you pay for. But it is true. Believe me, I’ve tried.“How bad can it be?”, I thought when I ordered the first pack of 100 double-ended, guaranteed blend-able in 100 different shades, no bleed, no dry-out, professional quality “Art” Markers for the irresistible price of $19.90.I wish I could tell you this was the only experience I needed to know better. It wasn’t.A shoe-box full with leaky, dried out, explosive ink-spouting things with phantasy color names and caps that have nothing to do with the color that actually comes out on the paper and don’t blend at all, even with those colorless blending-tools I bought separately and three or four sets of more then bizzare skin-tone-sets that nature wouldn’t allow in the worst circumstance on a human skin, and when I made my own color samples, I had to admit that all I really had was maybe ten different colors, at the most tells a very different story.Out of about 250 cheap markers, ten of them still sit on my desk, mixed in with markers like this one.You really really get what you pay for. In the face of 240 pens that will end up at Goodwill, a $7 marker that does exactly what it says it will do is a pretty good deal in my book of deals.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
2 months ago