*

Recent Topics

Author Topic: The importance of good nature hair brushes  (Read 1387 times)

Offline Anatoli

  • Scatterbrained Genius
  • Posts: 3021
The importance of good nature hair brushes
« on: 13 December 2012, 12:14:22 PM »
Composed an article about paintbrushes, and the various problems you may run into when they start to wear out and some examples of why nature hair brushes are preferred over synthetic brushes complete with pictures of each example.

The article is probably of most use for relatively new or struggling painters as everyone who has painted for a fair number of years have learned all of what I have written the hard way.

http://anatolisgameroom.blogspot.se/2012/12/the-importance-of-good-nature-hair.html





Offline fastolfrus

  • Galactic Brain
  • Posts: 5308
Re: The importance of good nature hair brushes
« Reply #1 on: 13 December 2012, 06:37:10 PM »
We were talking to Rosemary (who makes Rosemary's brushes) at an art show, and she said one really useful tip for prolonging brush life is to put a little bit of hair conditioner on the brush once a month.
Gary, Glynis, and Alasdair (there are three of us, but we are too mean to have more than one login)

Offline Mitch K

  • Mastermind
  • Posts: 1019
  • The Horror! The Horror!
    • Mitch's Wargaming and Modelmaking
Re: The importance of good nature hair brushes
« Reply #2 on: 13 December 2012, 07:10:07 PM »
I have always used sables and later kolinskys for my miniatures work. But at the end of the day they are consumable items. I have found that painting metal seems to wear brushes at a speed that people who work on watercolour paper (what most sables etc are designed to be used on) wouldn't believe. Used only for watercolours, a good sable will almost last a lifetime. Even on plastic kits with enamels back in the day they would last for years. On minis, they last a few months. And that's with not using them for drybrushing, inking or mixing - I use old brushes or synthetic mixes for these parts of the process.
Measure with a micrometer, mark with chalk, cut with an axe, hammer to fit, paint to match!

Offline fastolfrus

  • Galactic Brain
  • Posts: 5308
Re: The importance of good nature hair brushes
« Reply #3 on: 13 December 2012, 07:49:42 PM »
Rosemary is quite familiar with figure painting, even though she sells most of her brushes to artists.
Anyway, we mainly use sables too, but the hair conditioner works well on them.
Think about it - if you dipped your head in paint you'd need a bit of conditioner to restore it.

 

Related Topics

  Subject / Started by Replies Last post
23 Replies
11408 Views
Last post 11 September 2009, 11:03:51 PM
by Hammers
0 Replies
2194 Views
Last post 10 October 2011, 03:15:44 PM
by jdeleonardis
23 Replies
6554 Views
Last post 02 April 2014, 02:48:08 PM
by Argonor
19 Replies
2728 Views
Last post 24 May 2023, 03:21:08 PM
by Elbows
5 Replies
714 Views
Last post 20 March 2025, 11:00:12 AM
by boneio