

✍️ Elevate your digital writing game with timeless precision and comfort
The Lamy AL-star EMR black stylus pen merges classic pen ergonomics with cutting-edge Wacom EMR technology, offering over 4,000 pressure sensitivity levels and a fine 0.35mm tip. Compatible with a wide range of Android devices, it requires no batteries, ensuring uninterrupted creativity. Designed for professionals who demand precision and comfort, it includes replaceable tips and a function button, making it the ultimate tool for digital note-taking and drawing.
























| ASIN | B07ZQK8H1V |
| Best Sellers Rank | 205 in Stylus Pens |
| Brand | Lamy |
| Colour | Black |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (1,885) |
| Date First Available | 5 Nov. 2019 |
| Grip Type | ergonomic grip |
| Ink Colour | Black |
| Item Weight | 24 g |
| Line Size | 0.3mm |
| Manufacturer | LAMY |
| Manufacturer Part Number | 1234290 |
| Material Type | Metal |
| Model Number | PC/EL tip black |
| Number of Items | 1 |
| Point Type | Fine |
| Product Dimensions | 21 x 8 x 4 cm; 24 g |
| Size | 1 count (Pack of 1) |
T**8
Works really well with the re:Markable2
This was an investment, as it's expensive for a tablet stylus. However, from experience I think it's worth every penny. Two reasons: a) It's by far the best stylus I've used with my re:Markable2 tablet. It actually feels like using a pen on paper, and you can write at normal handwriting speed with it, unlike the many cheap £10-£15 stylii out there. This alone makes it worth it, as it actually makes writing on the re:Markable a pleasure. b) It's WAY more comfortable to hold inthe hand than the thin "stick" stylii that fill the chap end of the market. Not a big deal for a few scribbles, but using those things gets tiresome if you're writing out a brain dump over many pages. Infact it's like writing with a decent rollerball pen, such as the ArtLine's, which are particularly pleasurable to write with. If I had one minor criticism, it's that the clip is a bit too big to fit on the side of the folio case I have for my re:Markable. However, that's a personal preference as I travel a lot, and if I used it only at home, or I had a case with a place to clip it to, it's not a big deal, and can be remedied by buying a case that has this (I bought my case before buying the stylus). On the bonus side, it also comes with two replacement nibs, which is even better as I chose this because I'd already read that the nibs are long lasting. Summary: Expensive, but worth it. If you have a re:Markable2, you'll enjoy using this stylus with it.
L**S
Good Pen for Kindle Scribe 2024
I have been using this pen on my new Kindle Scribe 2024 for a number of hours only (received it this morning) and I do like it indeed. The unique thing about it for me is that it has a 0.35 mm tip, compared to the regular 0.70 mm. The built quality seems good so far, but it's too early to judge, isn't it? The Function Button is convenient and responsive, the grip is also good and comfortable. As far as I know, this is the only digital stylus with a classic pen design out there, which is also unique. Only issue with this pen is that its brand name will always remind me of our spineless Foreign Minister.
A**M
Works with the Onyx Nova Air
My Onyx Nova Air pen broke and I needed a replacement, I chose this because of the cap, as I’m hoping to protect the pen in the future. It’s a very well made pen, writes beautifully, but it is a lot thinner than my old Onyx Boox pen. The erase button is very useful.
J**K
Brilliant!
I absolutely love this stylus! I should add that I have been a user of Lamy fountain pens for as long as I can remember, mainly the Al-Star or Safari, and have built up a reasonable collection of them over the years. My 14 year old son also loves Lamy's fountain pens and uses them all the time at school. As such, when the time came for us to try an e-ink tablet, mainly for note-taking, my big fear was that the included Styli'i would be terrible, and so they were. I tried a Kindle Scribe and a Boox Air 2 Plus, and tried the included stylus which shipped with both. Apart from being far too thin for my chunky paws, they really didn't write that well. Given that Kindle and Boox both use Wacom EMR tech for writing which allows any compatible stylus to work on any EMR device (not iPads though which are not EMR), I tried the Boox stylus on Kindle and vice versa and in each case the result was sub-optimal. I was about to send back both tablets and consign digital notetaking to the 'it was a good idea at the time' category of dismal failures, when I happened across the Lamy Al-Star EMR on Amazon, and bought it for a really reasonable price compared to the (overly expensive) OEM options which had shipped with the tablets themselves. Inside 18 hours (a super fast delivery), I had the reassuring heft of at Lamy in my hand again, and I completely fell in love with digital writing. It is completely compatible with both devices, and as I then chose to keep the Scribe and return the Boox, I then configured the Lamy button (which is beautifully positioned for me at least) within the Kindle settings to provide me with the eraser function. Other functions seem to configure just fine too. The writing experience is excellent, far superior to Kindle's own stylus, it is brilliantly well made, and compatible with other Al-Star pens if you want to give the body and cap a colour change, however I see that a widened range of EMR's is coming soon from Lamy. It feels like my old faithful has had the digital transformation it needed to see us happily working together long into the future, and so for me the Lamy is super highly recommended. My 14 year old loves it too, which worries me as I think he now has designs on my Scribe...
R**E
Good Pen
The pen has a good thickness to it so it feels good to hold. I previously had the remarkable pen which feels very light in comparison. The pen feels solid and it works well with the remarkable nibs. I actually do like the nib it came with which has a pointy tip. I'm interested to find out how long the Lamy nibs will last in comparison to the remarkable ones. Having tested just on the remarkable tablet RM1, I can only give feedback that the pen is just as good as the original rekarkable pen. There are no delays or weird hapoenings. It works the same. The only difference is the feel of the pen and the quality of the pen. I purchased this pen because my Remarkable pen had a bit chip off by the nib which stopped itnfrom working and super glue brought it back to life for a short period but the plastic was weak. The Lamy seems a lot stronger and it is cheaper than buying a replacement Remarkable pen (marker). 1 thing that is a bit annoying (On Remarkable) there is a button where you hold the pen and sometimes, i press that button and on the Remarkable it created a straight line away from where you was writting. A bit strange but annoying at times. It depends on how you hold it but after a lot of writting insend to move my grip on the pen, i can probably adapt but i wished the button just did nothing.
M**W
I was a bit frustrated with the pen that comes with the Onyx Boox Note Air. The software is great, but the pen was a bit slippery and it's magnets were too weak so it often fell off the side of the tablet, ultimately getting damaged. The Lamy seemed like a good alternative, and it is. Pros: - Better nibs: the Lamy has a better feel on the glass screen of the Note Air. It feels like a felt-pen rather than a slippery piece of plastic. That makes writing easier. - Better sensitivity: the Lamy can register very light strokes as very thin lines, and heavy strokes much thicker. The standard Note Air stylus has maybe half the sensitivity range in practice. - Erase button: the button on the Lamy is well positioned (if a little hard to find) and works perfectly as an eraser, making the Note Air's note taking software even smoother to operate. - High Quality: the aluminium body of the Lamy is light (I initially thought it was plastic) and strong, and the lid protects the pen when you're not using it. The pocket clip is also very strong. - Comfortable: the thickness of the Lamy body and the sculpted shape of the nib area of the pen is all nice and comfortable in use. Cons: - Storage: without magnets, and very chunky, the Lamy has no natural storage place on the Note Air or its case. Fortunately, the clip is strong enough to clip the Lamy to your bag or shirt or whatever, just like a normal pen. - Price: I think the Lamy is decent value, but it's more than $0 extra, which is what the standard pen costs you. Having said that, I think the Lamy is a decent investment for its usability across multiple platforms, including Chromebooks, Samsung phones and tablets, other e-notes, and WACOM pads. Conclusion: If you have a Note Air and you use the pen at all for note taking or sketching, this is worth buying: it will certainly improve your experience of the Note Air.
P**A
Buon prodotto, fa il lavoro per il quale l'ho acquistata per sostituire penna del Surface vecchio modello. Soddisfatta!!
P**D
J'ai choisi ce stylo au lieu de ceux proposés par reMarkable et suite à mon expérience mitigée avec le Staedtler Noris Jumbo pourtant équipé d'une gomme. Avec le Lamy j'ai vraiment l'impression d'écrire avec un feutre sur du papier ! La pointe fournie est extrêmement précise au point de permettre la reprise d'un trait exactement où on l'a interrompu, cela sans trace de reprise ; un exploit avec de l'encre électronique ! Et le fait qu'il ait un capuchon de protection compense l'absence de gomme. Astuce pour gommer beaucoup plus précisément qu'avec l'outil gomme standard : choisissez dans le menu un mode stylo puis sélectionnez la couleur de trait blanche. Vous pourrez ainsi effacer vos tracés avec la finesse d'un trait de stylo, ce qui est pour le moment impossible avec l'outil gomme ! Et certains ont trouvé le moyen de hacker l'OS pour utiliser le bouton du stylo et l'affecter à un second stylo ce qui laisse entrevoir l'idée...
C**G
Vorab: Der beste Eingabestift, den ich bisher kennengelernt habe. Allerdings habe ich noch nicht sehr viele kennengelernt. Und das Wichgtigste für mich (und vielleicht andere Interessierte): Der Lamy funktioniert hervorragend auf dem EBookreader ONYX BOOX NOTE 2 in 10,3"! Etwas länger: Ich besitze seit kurzer Zeit das Note 2 von Onyx (Ereader mit Eink, 10.3 Zoll) und wollte damit anfangs nur lesen. Vor allem PDFs, und dafür eignet sich ein großer Reader sehr gut. Nicht so wichtig war für mich am Beginn die Möglichkeit auch Notizen (handschriftlich, Skizzen, Anmerkungen, etc.) damit zu tätigen. Beigefügt ist dem Note 2 dafür ein recht billig wirkender Stylus. In kürzester Zeit habe ich jedoch diese Funktionalität zu schätzen gelernt. Es stellte sich damit aber die Frage nach einem möglichen Ersatz für einen eventuell verlorenen Stift und vor allem der sich doch irgendwann abnutzenden Spitzen. Der Originale Stylus ohne Ersatzspitzen kostet bei ONYX BOOX 40€. Ohne Versand. 3 einfache Ersatzspitzen 10€ oder mehr ohne Versand. Der Lamy mit 2 Ersatzspitzen zum Kaufzeitpunkt inklusive Versand 30€. Nach längerer Recherche ob der KOMPATIBILITÄT (Informationen finden sich nirgendwo dafür auf der Herstellerseite von ONYX) schien der LAMY ein sehr guter, wertiger und vor allem im Vergleich dazu "billiger" Ersatz zu sein. Gekauft - probiert - perfekt! 3 Spitzen, viel bessere Materialqualität, besserere Haptik, günstiger. Preis-Leistung: Obwohl nur 3 Sterne, ist der Lamy wohl einer jener Produkte, die ein im Vergleich sehr gutes Preis-Leistungs-Verhältnis aufweisen. 3 Sterne deshalb, da offensichtlich ALLE Eingabestifte mit Wacom-Technologie heillos überteuert sind. Viel ist ja nicht drin, in so einem Stift. Aber das ist eher eine begründbare Vermutung und weniger knallhartes Wissen. Ein Großteil des Stiftes ist jedenfalls leer. Lediglich im Kopfbereich findet sich etwas Technisches. Aber: Der Lamy besteht aus solidem Material (Alu eloxiert, Kundsstoff) und steht offensichtlich den vergleichbaren Füllermodellen in nichts nach. Programmierbare Taste: Ehrlich? Ich habe keine Ahnung, wo ich die Einstellung dafür auf meinem EReader finden soll. Das ist ja wohl auch eher eine Frage der Software in Kombination mit der Wacom-Technik und nicht der von Lamy. Also keine programmierbare Taste für das Note 2. Aber: funktioniert als RADIERER und das reicht. Drucksensor: Funtkioniert auch auf dem NOTE 2 so gut wie der originale Stylus. Passt. Eine Neigungserkennung ist in beiden Fällen nicht gegeben. Liegt wohl an der Software des Note 2. Aufbewahrung der Ersatzspitzen: Ich weiß gar nicht, warum dieses "Feature" nirgendwo erwähnt wird. Die Ersatzspitzen kann man einfach an Stelle der Tintenpatrone im Füller selbst verwahren. Perfekt! Da gehen die nie verloren, was sonst sicher vorprogrammiert ist, bei deren Größe... Kompatibilität mit den Spitzen von ONYX BOOX Note 2: Ein kleines Detail am Rande - die Spitze vom Stylus von Onyx passt mehr oder weniger gut in den Lamy. Perfekte Länge, lediglich der Sitz ist nicht ganz so fest. Man kann die Spitze recht leicht rausziehen, sitzt aber ansonsten gut und ich verwende erstmal diese bis zur Abnutztung und dann jene des Lamy. Begründung: Die Spitzen des Lamy sind etwas härter ausgeführt. Damit ist das SCHREIBGEFÜHL auf dem Onyx (mit Screenprotector in Kunststoff) etwas rutschiger. Der Note2-Stift vermittelt ein etwas besseres Schreibgefühl. - Würde ich den Lamy empfehlen für den Einsatz auf einem EReader von ONYX? Ja. - Ist der Lamy besser als der originale Stylus von Onyx? Ja. - Ist das Schreibgefühl besser als mit dem Stylus von Onyx? Ja. Wegen der besseren Geometrie. Lediglich bei der Härte der Spitze bin ich mir noch etwas unsicher. Allerdings schreibe ich bis dato am Screenprotector und nicht am Mattglas selbst.
S**L
I had just lost my SECOND Movink pen, and decided that I didn't want to pay $130 for another one, so I came looking on Amazon for a replacement. I can attest that this pen works PERFECTLY on the Movink...I've been a fan of Lamy's pens for awhile, so this is just the best of both worlds. I'm using ZBrush on a Mac...I'd recommend this pen highly. It even has a nice "rubbery" feel on the screen. I got the smaller diameter one (not the POM). It says that the EMR one is for shiny surfaces, but my Movink has a non-glare surface and it feels fine.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
2 weeks ago