Sharpie Permanent Markers Ultra Fine Point Review 2024

Sharpie Permanent Markers, Ultra Fine Point, Assorted Colors, 12 Count
Sharpie
- Striking Assorted Colors: Includes Black, Blue, Green, Lime, Turquoise, Aqua, Purple, Magenta, Red, Orange, Brown, and Yellow
- Permanent Ink: Marks on almost any surface like paper, plastic, or metal
- Fast Drying & Fade-Resistant: Ensures brilliant colors last for long
- Multi-Purpose: Suitable for crafts, artwork, notes, and more
Quick Verdict
Pros
- Ultra fine point delivers precise lines for detailed work and small text
- 12 vibrant, assorted colors cover the full spectrum from black to yellow
- Permanent ink adheres to nearly any surface: paper, plastic, metal, and more
- Fade-resistant formula maintains color integrity over time outdoors
- AP certified non-toxic formula makes them safe for mixed-age use
- Fast-drying ink prevents smudging on paper and most porous materials
Cons
- Ink can bleed through thin paper when pressed firmly
- Ultra fine tip wears down faster than standard Sharpie points with heavy use
- Color intensity varies slightly between shades — brown reads lighter than expected
Quick Verdict
If you need Sharpie Permanent Markers that balance vivid color with ultra fine precision, this 12-count set earns its spot in any craft drawer or desk organizer. After two weeks of daily sketching, labeling, and one ill-advised attempt at painting a wooden planter, I'd recommend them — with a caveat about thin paper. Score: 4.7 out of 5.
What Is the Sharpie Permanent Markers 12-Count Set?
The Sharpie Permanent Markers ultra fine point set delivers 12 colors — classic black, blue, green, red, orange, purple, brown, and yellow, plus four mid-tones: lime, turquoise, aqua, and magenta. The narrowed tip narrows further into what Sharpie calls an ultra fine point, giving you maximum control over line weight. The ink is quick-drying, fade-resistant, and bonds to paper, plastic, metal, wood, and most other surfaces.

AP certified and non-toxic, the set is positioned for general use — kids, students, hobbyists, and professionals alike. Sharpie has made these in various forms for decades, and this particular ultra fine point configuration sits at the precision end of their lineup.
Key Features
- 12-assorted colors spanning the full visible spectrum
- Permanent ink bonds to paper, plastic, metal, wood, and more
- Ultra fine point tip for detailed, controlled marking
- Fast-drying formula reduces smudging on most surfaces
- Fade-resistant ink holds up to sunlight and water exposure
- AP certified non-toxic formula safe for all ages
- Cap seals tightly to prevent drying when stored
Hands-On Review
I'll be honest — I grabbed these Sharpies expecting to use them for a week and move on. They ended up on my desk for fifteen days straight, which is the longest any review sample has survived my usual rotation. The first thing I noticed was the weight. They feel solid, well-balanced, not cheap. When I uncapped the black marker and drew my first line, the tip glided without catching, and the ink flowed consistently from start to finish.

Color saturation was a pleasant surprise on the first few uses. The red and magenta in particular punch harder than I expected from a permanent marker — almost startling on white printer paper. By day four, I'd used them to label storage bins, sketch a quick logo concept for a friend, and touch up a faded serial number on a piece of equipment. No complaints on adhesion or drying time across any of those surfaces.
What surprised me was the brown. Every other shade performed as listed, but brown read noticeably lighter than the product images suggested. Not a dealbreaker — it's still usable — but if you're matching an existing brown tone, test first. On day nine, I tested the outdoor claims. I marked a wooden stake in the garden with green and yellow, left it in direct sun through a heatwave week, and checked it after seven days. The green held well. The yellow faded slightly, just enough to notice if you're being picky.

Here's where I almost returned them. Day twelve, I pressed too hard while annotating a thin sketchbook, and the black marker bled through to the next page. Frustrating — but my fault. Thicker paper or lighter pressure solves it. The ultra fine tip does demand a gentler hand than a standard Sharpie. On cardstock and mixed-media paper, there were zero issues. By the end of the two weeks, I'd recommend the set to anyone who values precision and color variety over heavy-duty industrial marking.
Who Should Buy It?
These Sharpie Permanent Markers work best for:
- Artists and sketchers who need precise lines and a broad color palette in one set
- Home organizers labeling containers, tools, or outdoor items that need weather-resistant marks
- Students and office workers doing detailed note-taking, diagramming, or color-coding documents
- Teachers and parents who want a non-toxic, versatile marker set for projects
Skip this set if you need broad, bold strokes for poster work or children's art where thick coverage matters more than precision. For that, a chisel-tip or brush-tip marker set serves better. And if you're planning to mark glossy photos or highly treated plastics where长期 adhesion is uncertain, test a small spot first.
Alternatives Worth Considering
If this exact set doesn't fit your needs, here are two solid alternatives:
- Sharpie Fine Point 24-Count — trades ultra fine precision for a wider color range and more durable fine point. Better for general writing and larger projects.
- Copic Multiliner SP — archival-quality ink with superior fade resistance and a more refined tip for professional illustration work. Significantly higher price point.
FAQ
Yes — once the ink dries, it bonds to most surfaces and resists water, fading, and smudging. On highly slick surfaces like some plastics, adhesion may weaken over time.
Final Verdict
The Sharpie Permanent Markers ultra fine point 12-count set delivers exactly what it promises: vivid, permanent color with precision control in a versatile, well-built package. The ultra fine tip demands a light hand, and the brown shade runs lighter than expected — but those are minor quibbles against an otherwise reliable performer. For artists, organizers, and anyone who needs detailed marking without switching tools, these earn a spot in the drawer.
Would I buy another set at full price? Yes. The color range, tip quality, and ink reliability justify it for regular use. Just keep thicker paper handy if you're working in sketchbooks.