Brushes

  • Fan

    While other brushes are primarily used by loading the brush with paint, the fan’s best use is clean and dry, softening and blending. A common use is to lay down color areas with other brushes and then using a clean dry fan brush with virtually no pressure, soften those marks slightly. This gets the brushwork…

  • Round

    There’s no roundabout way to say it, so I’ll get right to the point. You might think you need a really small round brush for tight detail. Go for the bigger brush that’ll come to a sharp point though. That big brush can hold more paint in its belly and you’ll be going back to…

  • Filbert

    Filberts are like flats with rounded sides. The filbert is a good brush to reach for when you don’t want the sharp edge of a flat. There are also variations on the filbert. One of these, and I’m not making this up, is called an Egbert. This extra long filbert will hold a lot of…

  • Bright

    Brights are like shorter flats. I don’t buy brights because eventually flats become brights from being worn down. Brights are great for scumbling and scrubbing paint. Their shorter bristles push paint rather than laying it down.

  • Flat

    The workhorse of brushes. Flats are great for laying in big blocks of color but can also be turned to make very thin lines when loaded and sharpened with paint.