you can only get it from a squid... sorry... you cannot make a squid ink...
The squid's ink amount depends on the size of the squid. The ink is used to confuse and paralyze the squid's attacker so that the squid can escape.
ink is expelled from their ink sac
The squid's ink sac empties out into the esophagus.
The eye of the squid is not where its ink pouch is located. The ink pouch is located near the rectum.
Squid ink has a lot of protein and can heal tumors.
No as squid ink reacts with heat and cold and wouldn't be suitable for human skin
Colossal squids have an ink sac, so they have ink. However, not much is known about the ink.For further information, check out New Zealand's TePapa Museum site about the colossal squid: http://squid.tepapa.govt.nz/anatomy/article/colossal-squid-the-inside-storyQuote from the site: "All squid have a sac of ink inside the mantle. The ink is a dark liquid and is expelled through the funnel. If the squid meets a predator, it shoots out a cloud of ink, which hides the squid so it can escape. No one has ever seen a colossal squid producing ink so we can't be sure what the ink looks like or how the squid uses it. As there is no light down at 1,000 metres in the ocean, dark ink would be useless! It is possible that the colossal squid has luminescent ink."
a squid uses ink for selfdefance like when a shark or something bigger tries to eat the sqiud the squid burst out a lot of ink and no squid ink isn't used for pens
Squid
they ink
Sepia ink is derived from cuttlefish ink.
Yes, a squid's ink sac does need to "recharge" after it is used. When a squid releases ink, it expels a significant portion of the ink stored in its sac, and it takes time for the ink-producing cells to replenish the supply. The duration of this replenishment can vary depending on the species and environmental factors, but it generally allows the squid to use its ink multiple times during its life.