SANJOKI Art Markers 119 Colours & Colourless Blender Dual Tip Alcohol Brush Markers
Product description
What these markers are for
If you want alcohol-based markers that do more than simple colouring-in, the SANJOKI Art Markers set is aimed at artists and students who need variety and blending help in one go. You get 119 colours plus a colourless blender, and the dual-tip design is meant to keep your workflow smooth: one end for more structured strokes and another that behaves more like a brush when you apply pressure.
On paper, this is the kind of set you buy when you’re building a marker kit for illustration, drawing, sketching, card making and design work, rather than just filling single-colour areas. It also leans towards beginners who want to try gradients without the constant fiddling you can get with less forgiving marker ranges.
It’s not a studio “single-brand mastery” product where you’d expect ultra-premium performance across every imaginable technique, but it does look purpose-built for practical colour work and everyday blending.
The essentials: dual tips and blend-friendly ink

The most immediately useful feature is the dual-tip setup. The chisel tip is described as measuring 6 mm in width, which should help with sharper edges, block colouring and lettering styles that benefit from a flat face. The brush tip is described as flexible from 1 mm to 6 mm depending on how much pressure you apply.
That pressure-based flexibility matters because it lets you shift from thinner lines to broader, softer strokes without changing tools. In real use, that can look like starting a character sketch with the brush side for expressive hair highlights, then switching to the chisel side to colour background shapes more evenly.
Blending is where this set tries to be genuinely helpful. The ink is described as high quality and non-toxic, and—crucially—“mixes easily”. The listing specifically suggests that beginners can create gradients more easily than with other markers, which is a meaningful claim if you’re trying to learn how colours transition smoothly rather than banding or harsh edges.


What you’ll notice day to day
A few claims are worth weighing because they affect how “pleasant” the markers are to use.

First, the ink is described as drying quickly and not smearing, with the note that wet ink won’t ruin your work. That’s the sort of detail you appreciate when you’re layering colours close together or racing to finish a card before it dries mid-session.
Second, the listing says the alcohol ink “never decolour[es] with time”. That’s a big promise, and it’s presented as a key benefit—just keep in mind that longevity can also depend on the paper and your storage conditions, even if the marker ink is designed to be stable.
Third, the tips are described as well made to help avoid burrs (the listing mentions “absence of rebabas”, i.e. no nib fraying/burrs). Even if you’re not an expert, nib consistency is usually what separates markers you can rely on from ones that start to feel scratchy.
Strengths and where this set may feel limited
What stands out - A large range of colours (119 colours) plus a colourless blender, which is directly aligned with blending and gradient attempts. - Dual-tip approach with a broad chisel end and a pressure-flexible brush end, so you’re not constantly switching marker types. - Quick-drying, non-smudge style behaviour is claimed, which can make layering more workable. - The set includes a durable, imaginative storage case designed to be folded/stacked in a way that keeps the number visible while you work.

A limitation to consider - This is positioned as good value for a bundle, but the information given doesn’t let you judge how “top-tier” it is for advanced, highly demanding techniques (for instance, very fine art finishing or matching extremely exact colour libraries). If you’re trying to push precision beyond learning-and-practice level, you may find yourself wanting more detailed performance testing data than what’s provided here.


It may also come down to paper choice. Even the best alcohol ink blending can look different depending on how the paper holds pigment.
Is it for you? (and who should look elsewhere)
It’s a solid pick if you’re a student, a hobbyist illustrator, or someone making cards and sketchbook drawings who wants a big colour set and a blender to practise gradients. It suits you if you like the idea of using the brush tip for expressive strokes and the chisel tip for cleaner, flatter colouring.
You may want to skip it if you already have a marker system you’re committed to and you specifically need very detailed compatibility or performance data that isn’t listed here. Also, if you only use one or two colours and don’t care about blending, the size of the set could be more than you need.

One practical buying approach: check your paper and plan to test gradients with a blender and one or two colour pairs before you invest time in a full piece. The blender and “easy mixing” idea is promising, but results can still depend on your working surface.
Tech specs
- Type: Alcohol brush markers (dual tip)
- Name: SANJOKI Art Markers 119 Colours and Colourless Blender Alcohol Brush Dual Tip Marking Pen
- Dual tips: Chisel tip (6 mm width) + brush tip (flexible 1 mm to 6 mm depending on pressure)
- Ink: High quality, non-toxic alcohol ink (mixes easily)
Should you buy it?


The buying verdict comes down to what you want from a marker set. If your goal is learning gradients, doing illustration and card making, and getting a wide colour selection with a colourless blender, SANJOKI’s 119-colour + blender bundle looks made for that kind of day-to-day creative work.

It might not be the best choice if you’re chasing guaranteed top-end art-material performance across every fine-detail technique, because the information provided doesn’t include testing-style specifics. For most learners and practical users, though, it’s a sensible “grab a wide palette and start blending” purchase.
Mini FAQ
Are these markers suitable for beginners?
The listing suggests beginners can create gradients more easily with these markers than with other options, which is a good sign if you’re still learning blending.
Do the markers dry quickly?

The ink is described as drying instantly and not smearing, with a note that wet ink won’t ruin your work.
What does the colourless blender do?
It’s included so you can help mix and smooth transitions between colours, supporting gradient work.
Is the ink non-toxic?
The description states the ink is non-toxic and refers to relevant European regulations including REACH (EC) No. 1907/2006 and amendments related to points in Annex XVII.
Products with discounts that might interest you
- Ohuhu Colouring Pencils 72 Blendable High Pigment
- Realcolor 120 Alcohol Markers Set
- Fuumuui 10-piece synthetic squirrel-hair watercolour brush set (multiple shapes)
- Vokiuler 262 Alcohol Markers: Dual-Tip Art Markers Set with App and Carrying Case
- Ohuhu Alcohol Markers 320-Colour Set with Chisel & Fine Dual Tips (Refillable)
- Solorage 12 Colour Dry/Wet Erase Markers (3mm) for LED Drawing Boards
- Vokiuler 204 Colours Alcohol Pens Set with App – dual-tip alcohol markers in a carry case
- Noaya portable watercolor palette 8 grids
- Ohuhu Supreme Brush & Chisel alcohol markers (36 + 1 colours) – dual-tip colouring pens for drawing, sketching and manga
- K.CINE dual tip brush pens 120 colours
- Ohuhu Honolulu Brush & Chisel Double Tipped Colouring Markers (Alcohol-Based) with Blender + Case
- Shuttle Art 136 Colouring Pencils set (136-colour set) for adult colouring books, doodling and sketching
- Oasser Dual Action Airbrush Compressor Kit with Rechargeable 1000mAh Battery (0.3mm nozzle, 3 pressure modes)
- Ohuhu Kaala B Series Alcohol Markers (60+1) – Mini Brush & Slim Broad Dual Tips
- Ohuhu 36 Colour Skin Tone Dual Tip Markers (Skin Tone Fineliner Felt Tips)
- Gelanty Black Fineliner Pens Set 12 Pack
- Ohuhu Kaala B 61 Colour Alcohol Markers
- Artecho 72 Dual Tip Brush Pens 72 colours 🎨

