Even if Golden Honey is an earthy colour, it is clear, clean and vibrant. The only similar colour to it in tone in my stash is J. Herbin Ambre de Baltique (Les Essentielles), but the latter has different characteristics and dries to a flat, chalky finish even if it feels smoother under my nibs; I much prefer this Diamine ink. Diamine Amber is brighter, more orange and less brown than Golden Honey.
It’s readable in nibs of all sizes, however, in finer nibs such as my Sailor 1911L 21kt H-EF and H-F, Golden Honey is readable more on blank paper: I find that even the lightly printed dot grid ruling on TR paper to be intrusive. Also, because I don’t find Golden Honey to be a highly saturated ink, the dots annoyingly show through the ink.
There is minimal ghosting only with wet wide nibs on thinner paper; I’ve observed no feathering, no bleedthrough, and experienced no skipping, hard starts or stained converters. The ink dries fairly quickly, probably because the flow runs slightly below average; my nibs don’t feel scratchy, but the ink feels thin under my Sailor nibs, even the wet 1911L 21 kt H-B.
With the right pen and paper combo, this ink has lovely golden sheen and presents a dark brown outline in heavily saturated areas where the ink pools. I would use this ink for markups on black text with very wet nibs on the thinner side, or for highlighting with broader, drier nibs.