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Sharpie Metallic Fine Point Permanent Markers Review – Worth It?

By haunh··4 min read·
4.4
Sharpie Metallic Fine Point Permanent Marker, Assorted Colors, 2-Pack - 1829202

Sharpie Metallic Fine Point Permanent Marker, Assorted Colors, 2-Pack - 1829202

Sharpie

  • Stunning sheen stands out on both light and dark surfaces
  • Authentic metallic finishes in opaque, permanent ink
  • Skip shaking, save your strength, and immediately enjoy stunning marks--no shaking required
  • Forget fading with quick-drying, fade- and water-resistant ink; AP certified

Quick Verdict

Pros

  • Opaque metallic ink works on both light and dark paper without losing vibrancy
  • Fine point tip (0.7mm) gives precise control for detailed work and lettering
  • No-shake ink system eliminates the frustrating pre-trip ritual of other metallic markers
  • Quick-drying formula prevents smudging on most paper types
  • AP certified fade and water resistant for longer-lasting results

Cons

  • Only two colors in the pack—gold and silver—no variety for multi-color projects
  • Ink can feel slightly thin on very textured paper like kraft cardstock
  • Fine point tip wears down faster than broader chisel tips on rough surfaces
  • Cap needs to be pressed firmly or ink dries out within a day or two

Quick Verdict

If you need metallic accents that pop on any color paper, the Sharpie Metallic Fine Point Permanent Markers deliver exactly what they promise. The fine point gives you precision for lettering and details, and the no-shake ink system genuinely saves time. Gold and silver are the only two colors in the 2-pack, which limits versatility, but the opaque finish on dark paper alone makes these worth keeping in your supply drawer. I'd give these a solid 4.4 out of 5 for everyday craft and journaling use.

What Is the Sharpie Metallic Fine Point Permanent Marker?

The Sharpie Metallic Fine Point Permanent Marker is a 2-pack of premium metallic ink pens — one gold, one silver. The fine point tip measures 0.7mm, giving you more control than a standard chisel tip. Sharpie built in their no-shake ink system, which means the ink flows consistently without the annoying pre-use ritual most shake-before-use markers require. The ink is opaque, permanent, quick-drying, and fade-resistant once set.

Sharpie Metallic Fine Point Permanent Marker, Assorted Colors, 2-Pack - 1829202

Out of the box, I expected to give them a firm thumb-press and a few test scribbles like I do with every new marker. The no-shake claim turned out to be accurate — the ink came through clean on the very first stroke. For someone who has wasted good cardstock to a dead-start marker, that matters more than it should.

Key Features

  • Opaque metallic ink creates a vibrant sheen on both light and dark paper
  • Fine point (0.7mm) tip for detailed lettering and intricate designs
  • No-shake ink system — ink flows immediately, no prep required
  • Quick-drying formula reduces smudging on most paper types
  • AP certified fade and water resistant for archival-quality results
  • Available in gold and silver metallic finishes

Hands-On Review

I tested these over two weeks across several projects: hand-lettered gift tags, a holiday card batch, a dark cardstock journal cover, and some scrapbook accents. The first thing I noticed was how clean the line looked on dark paper. I held the gold one up against a navy cardstock background I was working on, and it read almost like a real gold foil transfer — not flat or washed out like some metallic pens turn on dark surfaces.

Sharpie Metallic Fine Point Permanent Marker, Assorted Colors, 2-Pack - 1829202

By day three, I was using the silver marker on lighter projects — outlining die-cut shapes, adding subtle highlights to stamped images. The fine point tip glides comfortably and doesn't drag on smoother cardstock. On my favorite 110gsm sketch paper, the ink dried in under a minute, which kept me from smudging my lettering when I moved quickly between sections.

What surprised me was the ink consistency. I've used metallic pens where the first inch of line is watery and transparent before the pigment kicks in. These started dense and stayed dense throughout each use. I left the silver cap off by accident one evening — about three hours of air exposure — and was relieved to find it still wrote on re-capping, though I'd recommend snapping the cap on firmly every time.

The cons surfaced on heavier textured paper. On kraft cardstock, the fine point caught and dragged slightly, and the metallic sheen looked more muted than it did on smoother surfaces. For heavy cardstock or canvas work, a broader chisel tip would serve better. The two-color limitation is real too — a four-pack in gold, silver, copper, and rose gold would open up more design possibilities without breaking the budget.

Who Should Buy It?

  • Card makers and scrapbookers who want metallic accents that stand out on dark cardstock backgrounds
  • Journal and bullet journal users looking for fine-point pens to add gold and silver highlights to weekly spreads
  • Gift-wrapper and tag makers who need a quick-drying, smudge-resistant metallic pen for clean handwritten elements
  • Teachers and classroom instructors working on student art projects that benefit from opaque metallic finishes

Skip this if you need a wide color palette in metallic ink — the 2-pack restricts you to gold and silver only. Also skip these if you primarily work on heavily textured or rough surfaces where the fine point tip will wear unevenly. For canvas, fabric, or outdoor projects, an oil-based paint marker would serve better.

Alternatives Worth Considering

  • Pentel Arts Jelly Roll Super Metallic Pens — if you want a finer tip (0.8mm rollerball) and a wider set of metallic colors including copper and rose gold. Better for ultra-detailed work but slightly higher price per pen.
  • Sharpie Oil-Based Paint Markers — if you need permanent, glossy metallic marks on non-paper surfaces like glass, wood, or metal. They require more drying time but adhere to virtually any material.
  • Alcohol Art Markers (Copic or Ohuho) — if your focus is illustration and blending. Metallic options exist within these sets, but you are investing in an entire marker system rather than standalone metallic pens.

FAQ

Yes. The opaque ink formula is specifically designed to stand out on both light and dark surfaces, which is one of its strongest selling points.

Final Verdict

The Sharpie Metallic Fine Point Permanent Markers earn their spot in any craft drawer for one reason: they do exactly what the listing says without fuss. The opaque gold and silver ink looks genuinely metallic on dark paper, the fine point gives you creative control, and the no-shake system removes a small but real friction point from the craft workflow. The two-color limitation is the only real drawback, and it is forgivable given the 2-pack price point. If you regularly make cards, journal, or work on mixed-media projects, these belong in your toolkit.

Sharpie Metallic Fine Point Permanent Markers Review (2024) · HQ Color - Coloring Books & Art Supplies