Showing posts with label Brushes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brushes. Show all posts

Wednesday, 17 August 2022

Hake brushes


Hake (ha-kay) brushes are made from goat's hair. Their advantage over other brushes for applying kiln wash is that they hold a lot of liquid. Proper ones made from joined bamboo work better than the ones with flat handles.

Traditional Japanese hake brush


People often note that these brushes tend to shed hairs. The solution to stray hairs (given to me in a Bullseye workshop) is to invert the new brush and apply super glue at the point where the hairs emerge from the handle.  This holds the hairs in place. It will work on flat handles too.


Inexpensive goat's hair brushes of the hake style.
As can be seen by comparison, there are fewer hairs in these.


Wednesday, 25 August 2021

Hake brush



Bamboo handle hake brush


The hake (pronounced hah–kay) brush was developed in the far east.  It has several variations – the original consisted of a group of bamboo brushes bound together in a line.  These are still made and used. Many modern hake brushes have a broad wooden handle with a wide line of hairs.  These brushes are made of very fine, soft hairs - often goat hair is used. 
Flat wooden hake brushes
The flat hake brushes are most often cheaper and in a wider variety of sizes than the bamboo ones.  I prefer the bamboo for the feel in the hand that the broad handle gives.  With the longer hairs, it holds more moisture and delivers even amounts of kiln wash even with long strokes. 

Use
These brushes can hold a lot of moisture and deliver it evenly.  This makes it good for laying  down large areas of even colour in watercolours, and in glass painting. The same characteristic makes it very good for coating shelves with kiln wash.  The brush should be filled liberally with the paint or kiln wash. The brush should be gently shaken to remove any excess. Hold the brush nearly vertical and let the bristles barely touch the surface as you move along in smooth sweeps across the surface.  This allows the kiln wash to be evenly spread with very few brush marks.

Maintenance
One drawback of these brush is that the fine soft hairs are difficult to bind into the ferrule.  This results in the brushes often shedding hairs onto the shelf as it is being coated. A tip I learned from Bullseye is to treat the new hake brush with superglue at the base of the hairs. It does not have to be super glue.  It can be any runny glue, or diluted PVA.  I prefer super glue, even though it is reported to have some sensitivity to moisture. You can work the glue into the centre by using a needle to poke at the hairs to move the glue toward the centre of the bristles.  The glue binds the hairs in addition to the binding at the ferrule, and so keeps the brush from shedding. 

I did this on my bamboo handle hake brush a couple of years ago and it is not yet shedding hairs during applications of kiln wash.

Make sure you clean the bristles immediately after using to avoid any material drying among the hairs and causing them to break when next used.  To clean the brush, you only need running water run through the bristles.  Do not scrub the bristles against anything.  The hairs are delicate.  Set the brush aside horizontally to allow water to drip off and the hairs to dry.  Setting the brush upside down when wet allows water into the bindings of the hairs.  Putting it with the hairs down onto a surface deforms the hairs, making it difficult to straighten them later.


A hake brush is among the most useful tools to put kiln wash onto shelves and moulds because it holds so much moisture.  It does require maintenance to ensure the hairs do not shed and that the delicate hairs are not broken.


Sunday, 12 March 2017

Polishing Brushes

The polishing brush should have moderately soft bristles. A long bristled shoe polishing brush can be used, although one that is a little stiffer does the job more quickly.

A shoe polishing brush


It is important to keep these brushes free of hardened cement, as a brush containing pieces of hardened cement will scratch the leads rather than darken them. As soon as the polishing is finished, inspect the brush for little balls of cement. Rubbing the brush against a clean rough surface will clean it while the cement is “wet”. Also running the brush at an angle on the sharp edge of your work bench will clear some of the cement adhering to the bristles.

A polishing brush with slightly stiffer bristles


If the cement hardens, you can clean the brush by crushing the hard balls of cement with a pair of pliers. Or you can just get a new shoe polishing brush.

Wednesday, 20 November 2013

Brushes for Painting


A quality paint brush will have hairs that form a point and have a good spring to them - they bend while painting but return quickly to their original shape. A good brush will also hold lots of paint and deliver that paint evenly throughout the stroke. Brushes usually have a number to indicate their size - the larger the number, the larger the paintbrush. The larger the brush the wider the line that can be produced, although with a light touch a fine long line can be made because of the pointed nature of the brush.

The best brushes are made from natural hairs, although there are brushes made from a combination of natural and synthetic materials which are adequate.

Sable hair brushes are considered to be the best for painting. The hair comes from a variety of pine martin and the Kolinsky sable from Siberia is considered the best. These brushes are more expensive than others, but are soft and flexible, hold their paint well and can make an expressive thick to thin line.

Ox hairs are normally used for making rigger brushes. This is a round brush with long hairs, said to be used to paint the lines of ships' rigging in the past. The hair is strong and springy making it useful for long lines and thicker paints.

Squirrel hair brushes are useful for applying paint in broad, thin layers for matting.

Goat hair brushes are normally known as hake brushes. These are a traditional, oriental style brush. It lacks spring, but forms a good point and so is useful to cover larger areas quickly with a gentle touch.

Pony hair is made into short round brushes used as soft stipplers.

Hog hairs are made into hard, very economical brushes. They come in flat and round shapes. They are most used for stippling and can be trimmed, shaped, used, and abused for years.

Badger hairs are thicker at the end and thinner at the root, creating a conical shape. These soft brushes are used to blend paint once it has been spread on the glass. The brush is swept across the surface of the paint to blend or move paint and remove stroke lines.

Wednesday, 30 October 2013

Cleaning Blending Brushes



Cleaning badger brushes just before use, is easy. Flick, gently and rapidly, the very ends of the brush hairs against the side of your hand – but use respiratory protection and be careful not to inhale any dust. If you notice flecks of dust in your paint when you create a grisaille you’ll know it’s time for a thorough and wet cleaning again.




After each use, rinse out the brush tips in cool water. Gently rub the tips of the brush hairs to loosen any extra paint. Grasp he hairs above the tips to keep the water from the main part of the brush. Then wet the exposed ends of the hairs and rub them gently until the water runs clear. 


If you use a blender for oil, you will need to use a small amount of natural soap, if so, thoroughly rinse.


Flick the brush to remove excess water, smooth the hairs into shape and allow to completely dry by hanging the brush with the hairs pointing downward – this avoids water flowing into the brush base where the hairs are attached. If you have round-handled brushes, you can twirl the brush between your hands to remove excess water.


Sunday, 24 August 2008

Cementing Brushes

Use stiff, but not hard bristle brushes for cementing. Nylon scrubbing brushes have a good stiffness without being too hard. Some natural bristle brushes are very hard and scratch the came excessively. In general, moderately stiff brushes with about 1 1/2" bristles are fine for cementing. As they do not last very long, they should be cheap, but with firmly attached bristle bunches.

Cleaning the brushes is very simple. The action of rubbing the cement under the leads with whiting causes a natural cleaning action to take place. As the bristles flex back and forward over the came, the cement is forced upward toward the handle, and then outward between the bristle bunches. Only a little effort is required to finish the cleaning: push a rounded stick between the bunches to move out the remaining cement. You now have a clean brush for the next job.

The alternative is keeping the brush in water, but this presents the problem of getting rid of the water (oil and water do not mix) before beginning to cement. As the water will emulsify with the linseed oil, it will be carried into the putty, leaving gaps in the cement when the water eventually evaporates. The cement will eventually harden, even though in water, as linseed oil cures by creating an organic polymer through oxidisation. It can also rot the wood handles.

Keeping the brush in mineral spirits does keep the brush flexible but requires drying/evaporating the spirit before beginning the cementing to avoid the residue of the spirit creating cement that is too thin at the start. This can be a really messy problem!

If you choose the “dry” method, it is important to keep the brushes free of hardened cement as it will scratch the leads badly, if not the glass also. Most brushes will only last 5-10 uses, and as they are not expensive, should be easy to throw away.