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Bob Carnie

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Apr 18, 2004
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7,735
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toronto
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Med. Format RF
I am looking for a high quality line of brushes, I have one that is 4 inches wide Red Sable and is perfect but after thousands of coats its starting to fall into bad shape.

I do not use this brush to coat gum and pigment , rather I use foam brush to coat the pigment and gum mixture on watercolour paper and then I use this brush to smooth out the coating, I am not looking for any synthetic brushes btw.

I thought Daniel Smith sold these but apparently not now.
 

ced

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Oct 10, 2011
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Belgica
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You could buy 2 same size "hake" brushes (goat's hair also not too pricy) take them both apart and lay them one over the other and restich them back into one handle or have a new handle made that will clamp them.
 
Joined
Jul 31, 2012
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35mm RF
By "fall into bad shape" what exactly do you mean? How do you take care of it?

I've never seen a real red sable brush that large. Must've cost a fortune! Are you sure it is real sable? If you want to stay with a natural fiber, see if you can find a Mongoose brush. It is a thicker hair than sable, but has a fine point. Nice spring to it as well. Back when I painted I loved them. If you want a 4" one you might have to have it made. For a 4" natural hair brush you might have to go with a varnish brush.

There is always the Richeson 9010.....
 
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Bob Carnie

Bob Carnie

Subscriber
Joined
Apr 18, 2004
Messages
7,735
Location
toronto
Format
Med. Format RF
By "fall into bad shape" what exactly do you mean? How do you take care of it?

I've never seen a real red sable brush that large. Must've cost a fortune! Are you sure it is real sable? If you want to stay with a natural fiber, see if you can find a Mongoose brush. It is a thicker hair than sable, but has a fine point. Nice spring to it as well. Back when I painted I loved them. If you want a 4" one you might have to have it made. For a 4" natural hair brush you might have to go with a varnish brush.

There is always the Richeson 9010.....
I will post an image... the brush got damaged by my assistant (yes blame it on her) When coating I only used this brush as a feather touch smoother, She used as the brush to coat the paper and I think did not wash properly , basically the end got shattered and bent
Not sure its red sable, but yes it did cost a fortune , bought it 1997era. so it has done its time.

the Richeson 9010 sounds like what I am looking for I will investigate...thanks
EDIT.. I looked and I do have this brush but it is not the one I am discussing, I will have to post and image.

I wish I knew someone with a camera .
 

faberryman

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Jun 4, 2016
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I use the Richeson 9010 for PtPd. It came recommended by Kerik Kouklis. It was expensive, but not silly expensive. Properly taken care of, it should last a long time. It comes in a 4" width.
 

cowanw

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Joined
Aug 29, 2006
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Hamilton, On
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Now that we have (inevitably) gotten to synthetic brushes, you might consider going to the Above Ground, near the Art Gallery, and trying an Above Ground Gold Toray SH Wash 4" brush, on sale for $37.02. I cannot tell the difference from a Richeson 9010 on Plat/palladium.
 
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Bob Carnie

Bob Carnie

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Apr 18, 2004
Messages
7,735
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toronto
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Med. Format RF
Bill is the point soft as a babys tussh... I am using it as a final soft touch I am not charging the brush... I will give it a go and see.
 

Alan9940

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Jun 17, 2006
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Bob,

I wasn't going to mention these: http://www.pgi.ac/content/view/236/75/lang,en/ since you said no synthetic. I've used a Richeson 9010 for many years for pt/pd coating, but recently started using these handmade Japanese brushes and I'm very pleased with them. Like the Richeson, not exactly cheap but take a look and see what you think.
 
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Bob Carnie

Bob Carnie

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Joined
Apr 18, 2004
Messages
7,735
Location
toronto
Format
Med. Format RF
Bob,

I wasn't going to mention these: http://www.pgi.ac/content/view/236/75/lang,en/ since you said no synthetic. I've used a Richeson 9010 for many years for pt/pd coating, but recently started using these handmade Japanese brushes and I'm very pleased with them. Like the Richeson, not exactly cheap but take a look and see what you think.
These brushes look awesome, is there a North American distributer? how to go about ordering??
 

Alan9940

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Jun 17, 2006
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2,429
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Arizona
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These brushes look awesome, is there a North American distributer? how to go about ordering??

Hi Bob,

No North American distributor that I'm aware of. I sent an e-mail to info@pgi.ac telling them which brushes I wanted and asking how to go about ordering. They sent an invoice to my Paypal account and within a few days I received the brushes (west coast) in the mail. Very smooth and easy transaction.

Good luck!
 
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Bob Carnie

Bob Carnie

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Joined
Apr 18, 2004
Messages
7,735
Location
toronto
Format
Med. Format RF
Hi Bob,

No North American distributor that I'm aware of. I sent an e-mail to info@pgi.ac telling them which brushes I wanted and asking how to go about ordering. They sent an invoice to my Paypal account and within a few days I received the brushes (west coast) in the mail. Very smooth and easy transaction.

Good luck!
Ok thanks Alan
 
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Bob Carnie

Bob Carnie

Subscriber
Joined
Apr 18, 2004
Messages
7,735
Location
toronto
Format
Med. Format RF
Joined
Jul 31, 2012
Messages
3,359
Format
35mm RF
Bob, before you give up on Ol' Faithful, get a tub of this stuff which should be available at your local art store-

http://www.dickblick.com/products/the-masters-brush-cleaner-and-preserver/

and clean the brush with it. Really work it in and rinse it several times. After the brush is clean, work it in again, but don't rinse it out. Form the brush back to the original shape, and leave it to dry for a couple of days. The process should restore the brush, save you some scratch, and let you keep your assistant...

Hope that helps....
 
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