Chosen by customers in over 35 countries worldwide.

Handcrafted in the United States

Each Pitchman pen is individually crafted using carefully chosen materials and finished by hand. Nothing is mass produced. Every pen reflects a deliberate standard of care.

Trusted by Clients Worldwide

Pitchman Pens have been selected by customers across North America, Europe, Asia, and Australia to mark moments that matter.

Secure International Ordering

Encrypted checkout, protected payments, and careful packaging ensure your pen arrives safely—wherever you are in the world.

White-Glove Presentation

Every Pitchman pen arrives in our signature gift box, thoughtfully prepared for presentation, protection, and long-term ownership.

Handcrafted for Long-Term Ownership

Each pen is crafted for enduring use and backed against defects in workmanship.

Ongoing Care & Support

Questions, care, or service—our team remains available long after your pen is in use.

A Curated Collection

All Our Pens

This selection showcases a few of our designs. Browse the full Closer, Rainmaker, and Tycoon collections to see every variation.

Explore Them All
Pitchman Closer™ Blue Abalone Shell Rollerball Pen - Men’s Pen
Men's Pen | Pitchman Rainmaker LUXE White MOP Rollerball Pen

Frequently Asked Questions

If I am giving a pen as a first home closing gift, what color ink should be used for the closing?

For a home closing, black ink is the safest choice and the most commonly accepted. It scans cleanly, copies clearly, and rarely raises any questions with lenders, title companies, or recordkeeping.

Blue ink is sometimes allowed, but it can vary by office and by document set. If you want zero risk on closing day, go with black.

If you’re gifting the pen specifically for the signing, a simple move is: load it with a fresh black ink cartridge/converter fill before the appointment so it writes flawlessly when it matters.

Is a fountain pen practical for a closing, or should it be a rollerball/ballpoint?

For a home closing, a fountain pen is usually not practical.

At a closing you’re signing and initialing a lot of pages, quickly, and the pages often get stacked immediately. Fountain pen ink is typically wetter and slower to dry, which makes smearing, transfer to the next page, and messy signatures a real risk.

There’s also the paper factor: closing packets can include cheap or mixed paper, and fountain pens can behave unpredictably on it — feathering, bleed-through, or inconsistent flow.

What to use instead:

Ballpoint is the safest for speed, reliability, and smudge resistance.

Rollerball can work too, but choose one that dries fast.

If you’re gifting a pen for this moment, the clean approach is: use a ballpoint or rollerball for the paperwork, and keep the fountain pen as the lasting piece they use afterward in the new home.

What if the title company provides their own pens — can we still use ours?

Usually, yes — you can still use your own pen. The title company provides pens for convenience, not because you’re required to use them.

That said, a closing is a controlled process, so keep it simple:

Ask once, politely, at the start: “Is it okay if we use our own pen to sign today?”

Match their ink preference: If they tell you black only (or blue only), follow that.

Don’t slow the process down: If they prefer you use theirs for speed or consistency, just go with it.

If they say no, you can still make the pen part of the commemoration: have the buyer use it for the first thing they sign afterward — the first note in the new home, a short message to themselves, or even the first “to-do” list on the kitchen counter.

Explore other moments worth commemorating.

Explore