Looking for 10/0 Brushes in Series 7 Quality?

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blf

Member
Joined
Jan 7, 2020
Messages
22
Hey guys ---- my Abteilung 502 10/0's are getting ratty and the newer ones from them are like uneven straw for some reason! My favorites are W & N Series 7 but only have them in smallest in 00 and 000

Anything in the 10/0 size with that quality that you guys know of?
 
Try Rosemary and Co

Series 33 or 22 , I have 10/0 from her ...very high quality and excellent service as well

https://www.rosemaryandco.com

Nap

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One change I’ve made that has increased my skill is I stopped using tiny brushes. I don’t use anything smaller than a 0 with the majority of my painting done with a 2 even for 28mm scale. Teeny brushes don’t hold enough paint and they dry on the hairs very quickly which makes painting a pain but also ruins the brush. I’m talking about acrylics here but maybe small brushes are good for oil but I’m not sure. At least for acrylics there are no details too small for a 0 with a good point.
 
One change I’ve made that has increased my skill is I stopped using tiny brushes. I don’t use anything smaller than a 0 with the majority of my painting done with a 2 even for 28mm scale. Teeny brushes don’t hold enough paint and they dry on the hairs very quickly which makes painting a pain but also ruins the brush. I’m talking about acrylics here but maybe small brushes are good for oil but I’m not sure. At least for acrylics there are no details too small for a 0 with a good point.

Agree, a good point is more important than size of a brush. I use mostly size 1 and 0 of my Raphael 8404 :)
 
If you are in the USA Jackson's ships free of VAT . The US dollar is relatively strong right now. [There use to be no shipping for orders of brushes over 20 pounds but Covid has new shipping restrictions.]
FYI - I happened to check Blick and they carry a 5/0 and 6/0 in Raphael's 8404 :playful:
 
One change I’ve made that has increased my skill is I stopped using tiny brushes. I don’t use anything smaller than a 0 with the majority of my painting done with a 2 even for 28mm scale. Teeny brushes don’t hold enough paint and they dry on the hairs very quickly which makes painting a pain but also ruins the brush. I’m talking about acrylics here but maybe small brushes are good for oil but I’m not sure. At least for acrylics there are no details too small for a 0 with a good point.


That was something that took me a while to learn, because it was counter-intuitive to me when I started working more with acrylics. My experience with enamels and oils, was that the paint stayed wet long enough that it wouldn't dry on the brush, from the time I picked up the paint to the time I applied it to the piece. It was like working with ink in a ball point pen. So I could use a small brush to paint fine lines or details. And it was also what I usually needed to do when painting a scale model.

When I started working with acrylics, I really had to experience the fast drying time, to understand that a fine brush, with a small head, was no good. The paint would dry on the brush before I could apply it. So I watched what my friends who paint figures did, and noted the brushes. Then I went and got my first rounds. It took me a while, practicing with them, but one day, it hit me-the round is akin to a fountain pen. The full brush head holds the reservoir of paint, delivering it via the fine point. That's when it clicked for me, and I understood.

Prost!
Brad
 
A light bulb moment Brad.

But yes it takes a while to discover..your brush and technique.


Had to write something as I now have 1 more post and I hit 1000..... yaaa
 
I thought I'd look at his site but I'm sure you don't mean these?

https://www.brushman.com/

https://www.brushman.com/category/brushes/

Seriously though, as Kevin and Venko say, the old advice was that it's all about the point and that 'size doesn't matter' :angelic:

I thought I'd look at his site but I'm sure you don't mean these?

https://www.brushman.com/

https://www.brushman.com/category/brushes/

Seriously though, as Kevin and Venko say, the old advice was that it's all about the point and that 'size doesn't matter' :angelic:



Hi Neil,

Sorry for late reply, just seen this thread again. No, the address I meant is [email protected], e-mail only, doesn't have a website. A first-class chap.

R
 
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