Every year since 2012, at least one division of Pentel has released a new series of P200 pencils, somewhere in the world. In early August this year it was Japan with the P200 for Clena, then about a week later, it was Brazil with their version of the P200 for Boys & Girls. I just received my pencils from Brazil this past week.

Differences

This post is about the Brazilian version of the pencils Japan released in 2016 (http://www.pentel.co.jp/special/7711/), which were manufactured in Brazil. The Brazilian versions are different in several respects from the Japanese version.

1. The text of the pencils is different between the two versions. The Japanese version is all new, where the Brazilian version just adds the “P200 BOYS & GIRLS” in front of the standard text:

Japanese: Automatic Pencil P200 0.5 P205

Brazilian: P200 BOYS & GIRLS 0.5mm Pentel P205

2. Brazil changed the color of the text on all the pencils to Dark Blue except the Dark Blue pencil, they left white.

3. Brazil manufactures these in 0.5mm, 0.7mm & 0.9mm, where Japan only released these in 0.5mm.

4. Brazil used the standard black Inner Body instead of the white Inner Body that Japan used on their version of these pencils.

Color Codes

When I was entering these pencils into my tracking system, I found that Brazil had changed all of the color codes from those of the Japanese versions. I started trying to make sense of the codes, but could not from the perspective of Pentel’s color code system. Here is the list of P205 pencils with first the Japanese Color, then the Japanese Code, then the Brazilian Code.

Japanese Color Japanese Code Brazilian Code Navy P205BG-C P205-BM Coral Pink P205BG-P P205-SA Baby Pink P205BG-P2 P205-LP Serenity Blue P205BG-S P205-LB Off-White P205BG-W P205-CW

I could not figure out these codes, other than the P205-LP and -LB, being probably Light Pink and Light Blue. My wife suggested that the P205-SA is probably Salmon and the P205-CW is some variant of White, probably Cloud White. Neither one of us could figure out what the M is on the P205-BM, since it is a Dark Blue (Blue Major?).

The main thing I am wondering is, did they get someone in to Pentel Brazil in charge of these that has never worked for Pentel before, and so they did not know to follow the color codes? What other reason to use these non-Pentel color codes is there?

For all of the images below of the pencils, they start from top to bottom with the Japanese version, then the Brazilian P205, P207 and then the P209.

P200-BM Blue (Major?) / Navy

This is the Dark Blue / Navy pencil version of these pencils. As you can see very similar other than the text and the Cutout, where the Japanese pencil says Japan and the Brazilian ones do not list a country. The color of the white is a little brighter on the Brazilian pencils.

The IAN codes are:

P205BG-C – 4902506333957

P205-BM – 7898419167123

P207-BM – 7898419167178

P209-BM – 7898419167222

P200-CW Cloud White / Off-White

The White version of these pencils all use a blue text, but the Brazilian versions is a little brighter blue than the Japanese.

The IAN codes are:

P205BG-W – 4902506333995

P205-CW – 7898419167093

P207-CW – 7898419167147

P209-CW – 7898419167192

P200-LB Light Blue / Serenity Blue

Here is where the text colors start to change dramatically. The Japanese version in white is hard to read in this picture, but the Brazilian blue really stands out.

The IAN codes are:

P205BG-S – 4902506333988

P205-LB – 7898419167116

P207-LB – 7898419167161

P209-LB – 7898419167215

P200-LP Light Pink / Baby Pink

The text color here are both a blue, but again the Brazilian blue pops here.

The IAN codes are:

P205BG-P2 – 4902506333971

P205-LP – 7898419167130

P207-LP – 7898419167185

P209-LP – 7898419167239

P200-SA Salmon / Coral Pink

Here, I agree with the Japanese color choice for the text. I think the red goes much better with this color than the Brazilian blue.

The IAN codes are:

P205BG-P – 4902506333964

P205-SA – 7898419167109

P207-SA – 7898419167154

P209-SA – 7898419167208

Footnote: For the English speakers, Parte Dois is Brazilian Portuguese for Part Two.