At a glance:
• 2mm fine nib for line work, lettering, detail • Pigment-based water-based acrylic ink • Permanent and lightfast on most surfaces once dry • Refillable with Liquitex Acrylic Ink • Replaceable nibs • 58 colours including 13 metallics
The fine-nib end of Liquitex's new acrylic marker range — a pump-valve marker for drawing, journalling, customising trainers, marbling outlines, or any line work that wants pigment-grade lightfastness rather than dye-based fading.
Liquitex was founded in Cincinnati in 1955 by Henry Levison, who developed the world's first water-based acrylic paint for artists. The company is now part of the Colart group (the same Wembley-based outfit behind Winsor & Newton). The marker range carries the same pigments Liquitex use in their Heavy Body and Soft Body acrylic paints — which is why the colours are lightfast and why white is opaque enough to lay down clean over black.
The 2mm nib is the workhorse for fine work — outlines, lettering, journal pages, marbling details, technical drawings, and signature work on canvas. Press the nib gently a few times on scrap paper to start the ink flowing (it's a pump-valve mechanism, not a saturated felt-tip), then write or draw as normal. Colours blend wet-into-wet for seconds after laying down, then set permanent.
Works on paper, card, wood, glass, metal, plastic, fabric, leather, stone, and primed canvas. On porous surfaces (paper, wood, fabric) you can expect a soft bleed; on non-porous surfaces (glass, metal, plastic) the marker sits cleanly on the surface and dries permanent. Refillable with Liquitex Acrylic Ink and the nibs swap out easily when worn.
Specifications:
2mm nib • Pump-valve mechanism • Water-based acrylic ink • 58 colours (including 13 metallics) • Refillable • Replaceable nib • Lightfast and permanent once dry • Made by Liquitex (Colart group)
At a glance:
• 2mm fine nib for line work, lettering, detail • Pigment-based water-based acrylic ink • Permanent and lightfast on most surfaces once dry • Refillable with Liquitex Acrylic Ink • Replaceable nibs • 58 colours including 13 metallics
The fine-nib end of Liquitex's new acrylic marker range — a pump-valve marker for drawing, journalling, customising trainers, marbling outlines, or any line work that wants pigment-grade lightfastness rather than dye-based fading.
Liquitex was founded in Cincinnati in 1955 by Henry Levison, who developed the world's first water-based acrylic paint for artists. The company is now part of the Colart group (the same Wembley-based outfit behind Winsor & Newton). The marker range carries the same pigments Liquitex use in their Heavy Body and Soft Body acrylic paints — which is why the colours are lightfast and why white is opaque enough to lay down clean over black.
The 2mm nib is the workhorse for fine work — outlines, lettering, journal pages, marbling details, technical drawings, and signature work on canvas. Press the nib gently a few times on scrap paper to start the ink flowing (it's a pump-valve mechanism, not a saturated felt-tip), then write or draw as normal. Colours blend wet-into-wet for seconds after laying down, then set permanent.
Works on paper, card, wood, glass, metal, plastic, fabric, leather, stone, and primed canvas. On porous surfaces (paper, wood, fabric) you can expect a soft bleed; on non-porous surfaces (glass, metal, plastic) the marker sits cleanly on the surface and dries permanent. Refillable with Liquitex Acrylic Ink and the nibs swap out easily when worn.
Specifications:
2mm nib • Pump-valve mechanism • Water-based acrylic ink • 58 colours (including 13 metallics) • Refillable • Replaceable nib • Lightfast and permanent once dry • Made by Liquitex (Colart group)
Customers' opinions on Liquitex Acrylic Marker — 2mm
Related Items
Creative tools for every age, skill level, and discipline
As one of Ireland’s leading independent suppliers of branded art materials, we stock a wide range of products trusted by artists, designers, and educators across the UK and Ireland.
Our collection supports creative learning in schools and colleges, as well as the needs of career artists, illustrators, and those working in design, architecture, and technical drawing.
