A few thoughts: 1)Using larger brushes will will almost always improve your art, and give much more of a benefit than switching to the best expensive brushes. Since expensive brushes are....expensive, it is often impossible to go very large with them. 2)You can paint just as well with a $20 brush as you can with a $200 brush...you just have to understand the characteristics of your brush, and learn how to use it appropriately to achieve the effect you desire. Can't get a thin line with your your #20 synthetic? Use a rigger for the thin lines... 3)Squirrel hair used to be the sable alternative...now squirrel costs as much as sable used to... 4)I've found that often the CHEAPEST brushes give me the most joy and best results. 5)Princeton Neptune and Raphael SoftAqua are as good as I'll go...a couple of those, and then a motley collection of cheap junk, and I'm good. 6)Most 'good' artists'/pros do not use very expensive brushes. I've seen many using synthetic/squirrel blends and even full synthetic. I've literally only seen/know of a couple of pros who use sable, and that was a long time ago when sable didn't cost anywhere near what it does now. I suspect even THEY would be using synthetics if they were still around today, because synthetics have really improved a lot over the last 40 years or so.
I have Davinci Maestro series 35 Kolinsky sable brushes- they are the BEST. They hold tons of pigment and warer and still have a needle point. Getting them really helped my painting. The high quality hand made synthetic brushes are good, but there is still a significant difference to me. I always reach for the sable brushes first. The size 8 is the largest one I have of the Maestro- just can’t justify the cost for the larger ones .
this is a great review! thank you for the demonstration! when i was first starting out years ago, several of my synthetic brushes of varying quality were notorious for developing hooked points after just a few months, and i felt that their tips wore down very quickly. in comparison, i have a Kolinsky sable brush that’s over 40 years old, and it performs like it’s brand new - every time. i think there’s something to be said for the longevity of natural hair; in theory, one or two brushes could feasibly last you your entire career if cared for properly!
I do believe that sable can be better depending on how you use it … but his comparison is unfair and the results are exaggerated. He should have compared the Colineo from da Vinci or even better imho the Escoda Versatil. This comparison is ridiculous and these brushes hold an extremely fine tip. The finest tip I saw so far is escoda Perla …
I'd rather have seen a comparison of an imitation sable brush. I have one that acts like a real sable, but would have loved to have seen if the faux Kolinsky works as well as a real one
You're right Keith. I actually bought that brush a while ago and couldn't remember how much I paid for it. I guessed at £25 but I was a bit off. I can find them for almost half that when I search. I'll make sure I check prices first next time. All the best
It’s starting to break up and loose consistency because you are pushing WAY harder with the synthethic one just to prove a point. The differences are not that big if you are objective in comparison. There are DaVinci syhthetic brushes that hold up just fine with your sable one.
Thank you! For some, ANY amount of animal suffering is inconsequential to the supremacy of any human endeavor. I the synthetic industry is motivated to do so, technologies exist or can be created to perform like natural brushes.
I’m wondering about the Taklon fibers. Are they biodegradable? How good are these for the environment? I see people on TH-cam saying that they use vegan brushes. I think it’s misleading but I could be mistaken. I’m sticking with my Kolinsky sable brushes🤣
Taklon is the standard synthetic fiber for brushes. It is just another word for petroleum based and I 100% agree labeling brushes as "vegan" is misleading since it pretty much means "petroleum based" i.e. plastic. I have no knowledge of manufacturing process but I would say getting a quality brush you enjoy using (whether a synthetic or natural fiber) and use it for years is more environmentally friendly than cheap ones you never use. Personally I reach for imitation and mixed fibers due to cost restriction but used Simply Simon taklon brushes for years and only replaced one or two (though that was more due to not knowing better was out there than because they were that good, I went *way* too many years without points on my rounds). Imitation fibers truly do behave more like hair vs taklon that is a slightly upgraded version of those nylon brushes we give preschoolers. When doing watercolors hair/imitation is better but I would much rather use taklon for acrylic. All depends on the artist, medium, and style.
Be better to have a painting of a Siberian mink not a squirrel behind you so people can make the connect that sable comes from the tail of an animal who is generally trapped in the wild for their fur or else kept in cages piled on top of each other with no bedding. Many are skinned a live. Not worth that cruelty just for a painting. Winsor and newton synthetic sable brushes are so similar to sable they are even softer and make the most beautiful washes. Aqua elite brushes have a pin sharp point even in their size 12 brush.
So I’m guessing no brush company has paid you off. Nobody doing watercolor wants snap back. I know this and I’m a novice (at best) I make my own out of road kill
You want to get it as gift? Are you mad? Why you are calculating cost vs quality. Be specific & transparent. If you want to draw& deliver best paint you need to invest on best quality. My name is sai from USA, Using red sable brushes from DAVINCI , which may last longer at least for 3 years on daily use.
A few thoughts:
1)Using larger brushes will will almost always improve your art, and give much more of a benefit than switching to the best expensive brushes. Since expensive brushes are....expensive, it is often impossible to go very large with them.
2)You can paint just as well with a $20 brush as you can with a $200 brush...you just have to understand the characteristics of your brush, and learn how to use it appropriately to achieve the effect you desire. Can't get a thin line with your your #20 synthetic? Use a rigger for the thin lines...
3)Squirrel hair used to be the sable alternative...now squirrel costs as much as sable used to...
4)I've found that often the CHEAPEST brushes give me the most joy and best results.
5)Princeton Neptune and Raphael SoftAqua are as good as I'll go...a couple of those, and then a motley collection of cheap junk, and I'm good.
6)Most 'good' artists'/pros do not use very expensive brushes. I've seen many using synthetic/squirrel blends and even full synthetic. I've literally only seen/know of a couple of pros who use sable, and that was a long time ago when sable didn't cost anywhere near what it does now. I suspect even THEY would be using synthetics if they were still around today, because synthetics have really improved a lot over the last 40 years or so.
I have Davinci Maestro series 35 Kolinsky sable brushes- they are the BEST. They hold tons of pigment and warer and still have a needle point. Getting them really helped my painting. The high quality hand made synthetic brushes are good, but there is still a significant difference to me. I always reach for the sable brushes first. The size 8 is the largest one I have of the Maestro- just can’t justify the cost for the larger ones .
You sable brush reminds me of a squirrel brush. My sable brush is soft but springs back to its shape. I have Escoda reserve. Love mine great video
Very interesting and well explained. Thank you for your time!
Thank you Isolde 🙏. I’m glad you found it useful. I have a few other brush comparisons planned so watch this space…
100% agree with you. Always keep your eyes open for big sales.
Thank you Musia 🙏 If every you see Da Vinci Maestro brushes on sale let me know. I'm in the market for a size 12 :)
this is a great review! thank you for the demonstration!
when i was first starting out years ago, several of my synthetic brushes of varying quality were notorious for developing hooked points after just a few months, and i felt that their tips wore down very quickly. in comparison, i have a Kolinsky sable brush that’s over 40 years old, and it performs like it’s brand new - every time. i think there’s something to be said for the longevity of natural hair; in theory, one or two brushes could feasibly last you your entire career if cared for properly!
I love expensive one too but need to consider my level of painting and budget. Some day I will have one for sure
Okay, your demonstration convinced me! My goodness, everything about creating high-quality watercolour art is expensive, isn’t it?
I do believe that sable can be better depending on how you use it … but his comparison is unfair and the results are exaggerated. He should have compared the Colineo from da Vinci or even better imho the Escoda Versatil. This comparison is ridiculous and these brushes hold an extremely fine tip. The finest tip I saw so far is escoda Perla …
Exactly!
I'd rather have seen a comparison of an imitation sable brush. I have one that acts like a real sable, but would have loved to have seen if the faux Kolinsky works as well as a real one
Only one question. Who on earth is charging you £25 for a Daler Rowney Aquafine 26 Round? That’s rip off pricing!
You're right Keith. I actually bought that brush a while ago and couldn't remember how much I paid for it. I guessed at £25 but I was a bit off. I can find them for almost half that when I search. I'll make sure I check prices first next time. All the best
Pound7
😅😅😅
Tis not the sword but the hand that wields it...
What series is that Maestro, a 10, 11, or 35?
My conclusion after watching this is that 99.9% of people will be more than fine using a synthetic brush
It’s starting to break up and loose consistency because you are pushing WAY harder with the synthethic one just to prove a point. The differences are not that big if you are objective in comparison. There are DaVinci syhthetic brushes that hold up just fine with your sable one.
Thank you! For some, ANY amount of animal suffering is inconsequential to the supremacy of any human endeavor. I the synthetic industry is motivated to do so, technologies exist or can be created to perform like natural brushes.
or better @@JordanHunter333
@@JordanHunter333 And others don't want more plastic crap, but this was about performance and not your personal morals.
I’m wondering about the Taklon fibers. Are they biodegradable? How good are these for the environment? I see people on TH-cam saying that they use vegan brushes. I think it’s misleading but I could be mistaken. I’m sticking with my Kolinsky sable brushes🤣
Taklon is the standard synthetic fiber for brushes. It is just another word for petroleum based and I 100% agree labeling brushes as "vegan" is misleading since it pretty much means "petroleum based" i.e. plastic. I have no knowledge of manufacturing process but I would say getting a quality brush you enjoy using (whether a synthetic or natural fiber) and use it for years is more environmentally friendly than cheap ones you never use.
Personally I reach for imitation and mixed fibers due to cost restriction but used Simply Simon taklon brushes for years and only replaced one or two (though that was more due to not knowing better was out there than because they were that good, I went *way* too many years without points on my rounds).
Imitation fibers truly do behave more like hair vs taklon that is a slightly upgraded version of those nylon brushes we give preschoolers. When doing watercolors hair/imitation is better but I would much rather use taklon for acrylic. All depends on the artist, medium, and style.
I ve found a brush called Zen! I was in shock! The price? 5 euro ....better than a zibeline 60 euro one! The origins? Who knows?
Be better to have a painting of a Siberian mink not a squirrel behind you so people can make the connect that sable comes from the tail of an animal who is generally trapped in the wild for their fur or else kept in cages piled on top of each other with no bedding. Many are skinned a live. Not worth that cruelty just for a painting.
Winsor and newton synthetic sable brushes are so similar to sable they are even softer and make the most beautiful washes. Aqua elite brushes have a pin sharp point even in their size 12 brush.
So I’m guessing no brush company has paid you off. Nobody doing watercolor wants snap back. I know this and I’m a novice (at best) I make my own out of road kill
that's pretty cool. would you sell me one
You want to get it as gift? Are you mad?
Why you are calculating cost vs quality.
Be specific & transparent.
If you want to draw& deliver best paint you need to invest on best quality.
My name is sai from USA, Using red sable brushes from DAVINCI , which may last longer at least for 3 years on daily use.