Princeton Brush
Select Artiste Brush Filbert 2 Series 3750
Regular price
$4.50
Sale price
$6.00
A vast line of 29 distinct shapes, 108 individual brushes created for oil, acrylic and watercolor artists. Satin-finish jewel-tone blue handles and silver ferrules make Select as beautiful to look at as it is to paint with.
- Angular Brights/Shaders: Used for tight shading and curved strokes.
- Bright/Chisel Blenders: Length and width of brush is generally squared. Similar to flats, but shorter hairs make a stiffer brush.
- Dagger/Strippers: Long chisel edge for easy, fine lines. Vary pressure for thick-to-thin ribbon effect.
- Deerfoot Stipplers: Texturizing brush. Use a dry brush and light, pouncing technique for fur, shrubbery, and soft backgrounds.
- Detailers/Spotters: For fine detailing.
- Fans: Brush fibers are spread out making it useful for subtle blending and for textural effects.
- Filberts: Create a softer edge than a flat or bright.
- Flats: Longer hairs than a bright, this brush has more flex and a large color carrying capability.
- Grainers: Grainers produce a repetitive pattern of thin lines. The head of the filbert grainer is curved.
- Liners: Similar to rounds, but with longer hairs. Liners have a large color carrying capacity and makes long, fluid strokes.
- Oval Washes: A cross between a mop and a filbert, used primarily for laying in large amounts of color and blending.
- Mops: Mops have a large rounded shape that lays in large areas of color with a soft edge.
- Rounds: Smaller sizes are typically used for detail work and larger sizes tend to be used for washes and filling in color.
- Scrubbers/Scumblers: Use to rub out unwanted color, also useful for drybrush techniques and scumbling.
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Washes: A wide, flat brush used primarily to lay-in large amounts of color, to wet paper, or for blending.A vast line of 29 distinct shapes, 108 individual brushes created for oil, acrylic and watercolor artists. Satin-finish jewel-tone blue handles and silver ferrules make Select as beautiful to look at as it is to paint with.
- Angular Brights/Shaders: Used for tight shading and curved strokes.
- Bright/Chisel Blenders: Length and width of brush is generally squared. Similar to flats, but shorter hairs make a stiffer brush.
- Dagger/Strippers: Long chisel edge for easy, fine lines. Vary pressure for thick-to-thin ribbon effect.
- Deerfoot Stipplers: Texturizing brush. Use a dry brush and light, pouncing technique for fur, shrubbery, and soft backgrounds.
- Detailers/Spotters: For fine detailing.
- Fans: Brush fibers are spread out making it useful for subtle blending and for textural effects.
- Filberts: Create a softer edge than a flat or bright.
- Flats: Longer hairs than a bright, this brush has more flex and a large color carrying capability.
- Grainers: Grainers produce a repetitive pattern of thin lines. The head of the filbert grainer is curved.
- Liners: Similar to rounds, but with longer hairs. Liners have a large color carrying capacity and makes long, fluid strokes.
- Oval Washes: A cross between a mop and a filbert, used primarily for laying in large amounts of color and blending.
- Mops: Mops have a large rounded shape that lays in large areas of color with a soft edge.
- Rounds: Smaller sizes are typically used for detail work and larger sizes tend to be used for washes and filling in color.
- Scrubbers/Scumblers: Use to rub out unwanted color, also useful for drybrush techniques and scumbling.
- Washes: A wide, flat brush used primarily to lay-in large amounts of color, to wet paper, or for blending.