

ORDERING
Ordering custom pens is easy!
Here is a set of the most frequently asked questions about the pen engraving and ordering process. If you have any other queries or just are not sure how to proceed, feel free to:
You can also visit our Cityluxe WorkRoom to share your requirements. We would be happy to help walk you through the process step-by-step.

- Standard engraving lead time is 3 working days, subject to pen availability.
- Express next-day collection is available at our Cityluxe WorkRoom at Sims Drive — 601 Sims Drive #04-05, Singapore 387382 — subject to availability and workload.
What is the minimum order quantity required?
All of our products have a minimum order quantity (MOQ) of 1 piece — for both personal name engraving and corporate logo engraving. There is no minimum order requirement.
What font do you use for pen engraving?
We use Arial and Baby Script, in both upper and lowercase

Can I order multiple pens, each with a different name?
Yes, just contact us via email with your selected pen style and list of names.
Can my company logo be engraved?
Yes, send us your logo in high-res or vector format.
Types of Engraving Services
- Computerized Machine Engraving for individual names
- Computerised Laser Engraving for corporate logos and emblems
- Manual Machine assisted Engraving for individual names
About Laser Engraving
Laser technology allows logo engraving in more precise and finer details (compared to conventional techniques), thus allowing greater creative control, especially on metal surfaces. The laser cuts and removes a thin layer of the surface, showing the base material colour underneath.

Full Colour UV Printing — Available from 1 Piece
Full-colour UV printing reproduces your logo in vivid CMYK detail directly onto the pen surface, with raised UV ink that you can feel — a tactile, premium effect not achievable by engraving. We now offer UV printing from a single piece, ideal for luxury corporate gifts and one-of-a-kind presentations. The technique suits premium pens — on a Pelikan Souverän®, Waldmann, Pilot Capless, or similar luxury piece, the set-up cost is a small, proportionate addition to an already significant gift; on an entry-level pen it would be disproportionate. Contact us to discuss your project.
Pen Materials Suitable for Engraving
- ABS Plastic
- Resin
- Wood
- Lacquer painted metal pen
- Metal (Stainless Steel, Silver, Brass, Bronze and Aluminium)
Gift Wrapping Services
As a premium gift store, we have in-house gift-wrapping services to complete the one-stop shop experience to all our customers. Italian wrapping papers with a variety of themes and colour choices, plus our Cityluxe shopping bags or brand specific bags, are available. Corporate clients can also select gift wrapping services, if required.

Lacquer Engraving

Metal Engraving

Plastic Engraving

Resin Engraving


How to Order a Logo Engraved Pen:
- Find the pen style of your preference at our online store.
- Write an email to us with your preferred pen style and your full contact details.
- Please attach a vector file of your logo, such as an EPS or AI file in your email. If you do not have a vector file of your logo, please upload a high-resolution JPG and our art department will re-trace it for you.
- Engraving colour is by default the same colour as the product images. Some logo styles are also eligible for deep cut colour filled engraving.
- Prior to engraving, a final proof will be provided for your approval. Production will only begin when you confirm the artwork.
- Please call us if you have any questions for free consultation.
Other Information on Logo Engraving:
- Corporate logo engraving available from 1 piece.
- Artwork proofs are free for corporate orders.

Corporate Logo Laser Engraving

Text Laser Engraving
Engraving Effects of Different Pen Types
What Colour Will My Engraving Be? — Quick Reference by Material
| Material | Example Pens | How Laser Works | Engraving Colour |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lacquer over brass | Parker IM, Sheaffer 100 & 300, Waterman Expert3 | Laser removes lacquer coat, exposing the brass underneath | ✦ Gold-tone |
| Anodised aluminium | LAMY AL-Star, Kaweco AL Sport, Pelikan M205 Al | Laser bleaches the anodised surface layer | ✦ Off-white / Silver-grey |
| Solid stainless steel | Parker Jotter Steel, Waterman Hemisphere Stainless | Laser tempers the steel surface (no removal) | ✦ Dark charcoal (tone-on-tone) |
| Matte lacquer over brass | Parker IM Professional Monochrome, Sheaffer Sentinel | Laser removes matte coat, reveals polished brass beneath | ✦ Bright gold contrast |
| ABS / Polycarbonate plastic | LAMY Safari, Kaweco Classic Sport, Sheaffer VFM | Mechanical engraving — physically carves into the plastic | ✦ Raw plastic tone (colour-fill available) |
| Resin | Pelikan M400, M600, Waterman Carène | Mechanical engraving at specialist depth settings | ✦ Varies by resin colour — discuss with us |
Colour outcomes are illustrative. Final result depends on pen brand, specific finish, and engraving depth. We always produce a test mark on a sample pen before bulk orders.
Not sure which material or finish suits your budget? Our brand guides cover engraving outcomes in detail for each series — see the 2026 Parker Series Guide, the LAMY Singapore Guide, or the Sheaffer Complete Guide to compare finishes before you order.
| Pen | Material | Lifestyle Shot | Description |
![]() |
Lacquer | ![]() |
The foundation of this material consists of either brass material, Stainless Steel or aluminum, which is determined by the pen's base color. The metal base is then coated with lacquer. After engraving the surface, the base color beneath the lacquer is exposed, creating a distinctive effect. |
![]() |
Metal | ![]() |
The core of this can be either brass material, Stainless Steel or aluminum, depending on the pen's underlying color. The surface of the material is covered in a matte black coating. When the surface is engraved, the true base color is unveiled. |
![]() |
Plastic | ![]() |
Plastic engraving refers to the process of creating engraved designs or patterns on plastic surfaces. Unlike other materials like metal or wood, plastic engraving involves removing layers of plastic material to reveal the desired design. |
![]() |
Resin | ![]() |
The process of resin engraving typically starts with preparing the resin surface. This may involve sanding or polishing the resin to ensure a smooth and even surface for engraving. Once the surface is prepared, the engraving can be done using different methods and tools. |
Engraving Fonts: Arial, Baby Script and Monotype Corsiva
Character Limit Guide by Barrel Size
| Barrel Type | Example Pens | Recommended Max | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard barrel | Parker IM, Sheaffer 100/300, Waterman Expert, LAMY Safari | 15–20 characters incl. spaces | Full name, short message, or name + date |
| Wider barrel | Parker Sonnet, Pelikan M400+, Waterman Carène | 20–25 characters incl. spaces | More room — suits longer dedications |
| Slim / pocket barrel | Kaweco Sport, Sheaffer VFM, Parker Jotter | 8–12 characters incl. spaces | Initials, monogram, or single short name |
| Liliput / mini | Kaweco Liliput, Kaweco Pico | 3–6 characters | Initials only — contact us before ordering |
Counts include spaces. Longer text can be split across two lines on wider barrels. When in doubt, contact us before placing your order — we will advise on layout and sizing.
The font available to you depends on the engraving method used for your pen.
Mechanical engraving (plastic-bodied pens such as Kaweco Sport, Kaweco Skyline Sport, and TWSBI) uses Arial and Baby Script — a flowing cursive well-suited to personal names. Mechanical engravers use single-line fonts from a fixed installed set; full system font libraries are not available on this type of machine.
Laser engraving (metal pens such as Parker, Sheaffer, LAMY Studio, and Cross) uses Arial and Monotype Corsiva — a classic, elegant italic that reproduces fine detail with precision on metal surfaces. If you are unsure which method applies to your chosen pen, contact us and we will advise.
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
The Complete Guide to Pen Engraving
Everything customers ask us — and everything worth knowing before you order.
A Brief History of Engraving
Engraving is one of the oldest forms of human mark-making. The impulse to incise a surface — to leave a permanent, personal impression — predates writing itself. Understanding this history places modern pen engraving in a richer context, and helps explain why an engraved pen carries a weight that a printed label never can.
The earliest known engraved objects are approximately 500,000 years old: geometric patterns scratched into shells, discovered in Java. These were not accidental. They represent deliberate, repeated marks — proof that the intention to create a permanent personal mark is deeply human.
By 3000 BC, Sumerian craftsmen were carving cylinder seals from stone — small, rolling stamps engraved with unique personal or institutional designs. Pressed into soft clay, they authenticated documents, confirmed identity, and sealed containers. Engraving was not decoration: it was legal infrastructure.
European craftsmen of the 1400s and 1500s developed copper plate engraving for fine art printing. Albrecht Dürer's copper plate masterworks from this era demonstrate that engraving had become a medium for the highest artistic expression. By the 1800s, pantograph machines allowed craftsmen to mechanically reproduce consistent monograms and lettering across gifts, trophies, watches, and writing instruments — the direct ancestor of modern pen personalisation.
How Laser Engraving Works — The Science
LASER is an acronym: Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation. Unlike ordinary light, laser light is coherent — all the waves travel in the same direction at the same wavelength. This coherence allows the beam to be focused to a point of extreme intensity, small enough to vaporise material at a microscopic scale with no contact at all.
In a laser engraving machine, the beam is directed by computer-controlled mirrors across the surface of the pen barrel. Where the beam lands, it transfers energy so rapidly that the surface material vaporises — not melts, not burns in the traditional sense, but converts directly from solid to gas. The result is a clean, precise recess with very sharp edges.
The computer controls not just the path of the beam, but its power, speed, and frequency — allowing the operator to calibrate precisely for each pen material. A lacquer-coated brass pen requires different settings from a plastic-bodied pen or a bare stainless steel barrel. Getting these settings right is a function of experience, and it is one of the reasons pen engraving is best left to specialists who work with these materials every day.
What happens to the pen surface depends on the material:
How Mechanical Engraving Developed — The History
Mechanical engraving is far older than laser. For most of recorded history, engraving meant a craftsman with a sharp tool — a graver or burin — cutting directly into a surface by hand. The skill required was considerable, and truly fine work took years to master. Each piece was unique, reflecting the hand of its maker.
The pantograph — a mechanical device that uses a system of linked arms to reproduce a shape at a scaled size — transformed engraving in the 19th century. By tracing a large template letter, the pantograph guided a cutting tip across a workpiece at a proportionally reduced scale. For the first time, consistent, repeatable lettering was possible without requiring master-level hand skill for every single piece.
Jewellers, silversmiths, trophy engravers, and pen manufacturers adopted pantograph machines rapidly. The ability to engrave a consistent monogram on a silver pen barrel — reproducible across dozens of identical pieces — made personalised gifts commercially viable at scale.
Computer numerical control (CNC) technology, developed through the latter half of the 20th century, replaced the physical pantograph template with a digital one. Instead of tracing a metal letter template, the operator types the text on a computer, selects a font, positions it on a digital representation of the workpiece, and sends the file to the machine. The machine's motors execute the cutting path with a precision no human hand could sustain across hundreds of pieces.
Modern CNC engraving machines used for pen work use carbide or diamond-tipped cutting tools — extremely hard materials capable of cutting steel, brass, aluminium, and most plastics without wearing significantly. The spindle rotates the cutting tip at high speed while the machine's axes drive it along the programmed path, carving the design into the surface one stroke at a time.
How Mechanical Engraving Works — The Mechanics
A CNC-guided hardened cutting tip — carbide or diamond-tipped — rotates at high speed and is driven across the pen barrel in a programmed path, physically carving a V- or U-shaped groove into the surface. The pen is secured in a purpose-built cradle that accounts for the barrel's cylindrical geometry, ensuring consistent cutting depth around the curve. The result has three defining characteristics:
Will Pen Engraving Wear Off?
Engraving physically removes material from the pen surface. There is no ink, no print, no adhesive label, and no surface coating involved. The engraved recess is part of the pen itself — as permanent as the pen's barrel material.
Compare this with alternative personalisation methods:
- Printed text — applied on top of the surface. Fades with handling, washing, and exposure to oils and solvents.
- Vinyl or sticker labels — peel, bubble, and degrade within months of regular use.
- Pad printing — more durable than stickers, but still a surface application that will show wear on a daily-carry pen within years.
Engraving, done on a suitable material, is effectively permanent. Harder metals — stainless steel, brass, titanium — hold engravings extremely well and will outlast the pen's mechanical components by decades. Even softer materials like aluminium and lacquer-coated brass produce engravings that will remain legible for the lifetime of the pen under normal use.
What to Engrave on a Pen — Ideas and Guidance
🎁 For personal gifts
🏢 For corporate gifts
Why Have Your Pen Engraved by a Pen Specialist?
Engraving a pen is not the same as engraving a flat metal plate or a trophy. The barrel is cylindrical, the surface is often coated or lacquered, and the materials vary significantly between models — all factors that affect machine settings, fixturing, and the quality of the final result. A general engraving shop may be excellent at what they normally engrave. Pens are a specialist task.
The Cylindrical Fixturing Difference
Every pen barrel at Cityluxe is secured in a purpose-built cradle jig before engraving — a fixture machined specifically for the cylindrical geometry of pen barrels. This ensures that the cutting depth is consistent as the tool travels around the curve of the barrel. Without the correct fixturing, the engraving cuts deeper on one side than the other, producing an uneven mark. Most generalist engravers use flat clamps designed for bracelets, plates, or trophies — tools that cannot properly hold a cylindrical pen barrel. We have invested in specialist pen fixturing precisely because a SGD 200 Parker Sonnet deserves better than a bracket designed for a keychain.
Does Engraving Damage the Pen?
The cutting depth for a typical name engraving is a fraction of a millimetre — imperceptible in terms of the pen barrel's structural strength, but deep enough to be permanent and tactile. On a lacquer-coated pen, the laser removes only the lacquer layer and a minimal amount of base material, leaving the underlying barrel fully intact.
The critical word is "correctly." Engraving a pen requires knowing the material, calibrating the machine to appropriate settings, and fixturing the pen correctly. Using incorrect laser power on a plastic pen, for example, can cause hazing or micro-cracking in the surrounding area. This is why we only engrave pens from our own collection — pens whose materials and finishes we know precisely.
✍️ Can I Engrave a Pen I Already Own, Bought Elsewhere?
Even with professional equipment and experienced operators, engraving involves a very small but non-zero probability of an adverse outcome — a material that responds differently than expected, a finish that reacts unexpectedly to laser energy, a pen that is not held securely by the standard fixturing. For pens we sell, we know the material and finish precisely, and we can make things right if needed.
For a pen purchased elsewhere — especially one with sentimental or historical significance — we may not have a replacement. A pen with emotional value to its owner is, in practical terms, irreplaceable, and we are not willing to take that risk on your behalf.
If you would like an engraved pen, we carry over 100 models across a wide range of styles and price points. We are confident we can find a pen that suits you — and that you will be pleased with the engraving result.
What Information Do We Need from You?
- Exact name or text to be engraved
- Font preference (we will advise if one is better suited to your pen)
- Upper case, lower case, or mixed case
- EPS or AI vector file of your logo
- High-resolution JPG if no vector available — we will re-trace at no charge
- Preferred engraving position on the barrel
Corporate Logo Engraving — Client Examples
A selection of corporate logo engraving projects we have completed for Singapore businesses. Every finish type represented here — laser on metal, laser on lacquer, mechanical on plastic, and full-colour silk screen.
We are also able to engrave your company logo or emblem onto the pen barrel and the metal gift box, where available — creating a fully co-branded presentation that makes a lasting impression.
We offer Logo Imprinting in full colour on select pen styles for bulk corporate orders. A great option when your logo uses multiple colours that cannot be reproduced by engraving alone.
Pair the engraved pen with a personalised notebook for a complete and truly memorable corporate gift set.
Mechanical engraving — Parker lacquered ballpoint pen
Logo + individual name laser engraving — anodised metal pen
Laser engraving — bare metal pen barrel
Laser engraving — matt lacquered Parker Rollerball pen
Laser engraving — Parker Jotter stainless steel pen
Silk screen full-colour printing — ABS plastic pen
Singapore Airlines — Sheaffer 300 Chrome GT · Laser on metal
Singapore Airlines — Sheaffer 300 Black GT · Laser on lacquer
What Our Corporate Clients Say
Laser vs Mechanical Engraving — At a Glance
Now that you understand both methods in full, here is how they compare for pen engraving specifically:
⚡ Laser Engraving
|
⚙️ Mechanical Engraving
|
|
|---|---|---|
| 🔬 How it works | Coherent laser beam vaporises a precise, thin layer of surface material. | CNC-guided carbide or diamond-tip cutter physically carves a groove into the surface. |
| 🎯 Best for | Corporate logos, fine detail artwork, metal and lacquer-coated pens. | Personal name engravings, plastic pens (Kaweco Sport, TWSBI), colour-fill work. |
| 🔍 Detail level | Very high — fine lines, logo artwork, very small text reproduced with precision. | Excellent for text and monograms; less suited to complex logo artwork. |
| ✋ Feel | Smooth, flat ablated surface — clean and flush with the barrel. | Tactile V- or U-shaped groove — you can feel each letter with your fingertip. |
| 🌞 Heat involved? | Yes — laser vaporises material with heat. Risk of hazing on some light plastics. | No significant heat — surrounding material left completely unaffected. |
| 🌈 Colour-fill possible? | Difficult — laser marks are shallow and irregular in depth for fill work. | Yes — consistent groove depth allows enamel or lacquer colour-fill. |
| 🖊️ Typical use at Cityluxe | Corporate logos on Parker, Sheaffer, LAMY, and other metal-barrelled pens. | Personal name engravings on Kaweco Sport, TWSBI, and other plastic-bodied pens. |
| ✅ Choose this if… | You need a logo or fine artwork on a metal pen. | You want a personal name on a plastic pen, or a colour-filled result. |
Not sure which method suits your pen? Email us or WhatsApp and we will advise you.
Our complete Singapore guide covers pen options by budget, logo engraving, font styles, turnaround times, and real client examples.
Read: Corporate Gift Pens Singapore — The Complete Guide →
Not Sure Which Pen Engraves Best? Read the Brand Guides
Different pen models engrave differently — lacquer reveals gold, anodised aluminium reveals silver, stainless steel gives a dark charcoal mark. Our brand guides break down each pen series in full, including which models engrave well, which finishes photograph best on an engraved corporate gift, and what each pen communicates to the recipient.
Ready to Brand Your Corporate Pens?
Send us your logo file — AI, EPS, PDF, or SVG — along with the pen model and quantity you need. We'll reply within 1 business day with a digital proof and quote.
No minimum order · Digital proof before production · Express collection available · Lead time 3 working days
✉ Send Us Your Logo FilePrefer to visit in person? Cityluxe WorkRoom · 601 Sims Drive #04-05, Singapore 387382
Mon–Fri 11am–7pm · Sat 12:30–6pm · 11-min walk from Aljunied MRT (EW9) · Free parking
Need Non-Latin Script Engraving? 汉字 · 한글 · 日本語 · தமிழ் · العربية
Cityluxe specialises in complex non-Latin scripts — Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Tamil and Arabic. Our Windows-based laser software supports any installed font, including correct right-to-left rendering for Arabic and Jawi. No other boutique engraving workshop in Singapore covers this full range.
汉字
Simplified & Traditional · KaiTi, DengXian Light
View Guide →한글
Hangul + bilingual on same pen · Batang, Gulim
View Guide →日本語 · தமிழ் · عربي
RTL Arabic/Jawi · Mincho, Latha, Traditional Arabic · No minimum
View Guide →











⚙️ Mechanical Engraving