Fiber: Brand: The Fine Touch. Style/Color: SKU: 1457985. Compose and paint the most whimsical masterpiece with none other than Gold Taklon Paint Brushes. Featuring gold taklon bristles with an assortment of brush tips, these brushes will produce even coverage and lots of. Nylon bristles are recommended for water-based paint, though most can also be used with oil-based paints. This type of paint brush is not recommended for applying shellac or lacquer. Nylon/polyester blend paint brushes. Nylon/polyester brushes combine.
Fine Touch Paint Brushes
- The Fine Touch Blank Canvas Set - 12' x 12' 5 stars (2) price $4.99 Quick view Sale Black Nylon All Purpose Paint Brushes - 3 Piece Set 2 1 stars 5 (2) was: $9.99 now: $4.99 Quick view Sale Jumbo Flat Paint Brushes - 3 Piece Set 4 2 stars 5 (4) was: $12.99 now: $6.49 Quick view.
- Article Number: Fiber: Brand: The Fine Touch. Style/Color: SKU: 327254. Paint Brushes provide a wide range of sizes and shapes for medium and fine detail painting. Featuring an assortment of natural bristles, these brushes are perfect for beginning artists or crafters who need durable, inexpensive brushes for applying watercolor, dyes, leafing, and more.
I’m not a painter, or at least, not very often. Painting is expensive, time consuming, and space requiring. But nowadays there are budget products that are easing the “pain” a little bit. Bopping in to your local superstore and buying a set of brushes with a canvas or two for less than $20 is incredible. And “The Fine Touch” is one of the more visible brands (in my area at least) selling inexpensive painting supplies, like a set of three 1-inch increment synthetic brushes. Do they really work though?
Despite the common wisdom for years being that natural hair brushes are superior to synthetic nylon ones, they have made some improvement in quality over that time. I don’t know if the best synthetic brushes are better than the best natural ones, nor would I claim that these are better than any other brush, but I personally prefer the little extra “bounce” the nylon provides, and they’ve worked quite well for me over several painting projects.
The basic structure is the same as virtually all paint brushes: a wooden handle with information printed on it (varnished in this case) shaped like a paddle with a ferrule on one end that holds in a set of bristles. Conveniently, these also have a hanging hole at the end for easy storage. Everything about them is cheap; the wood is lighter than the bristles, with brush strokes in its finish and burs on the drill holes; the ferrules are a flimsily metal (which will likely rust) that has either cracked or slightly splintered each handle in the fastening process, and the bristles have a bad habit of falling out during the first few uses.
The Fine Touch Brush Set
So obviously they aren’t “forever” brushes, but for what they are (cheap superstore brushes) they are entirely adequate to paint with. If you only have a couple projects, just want to get some paint down, or feel the need to ease into things you might not know you want to do “forever”, then they will work just fine for that. You won’t become a master using these, and you might get frustrated with the bristles in your paintings, but they work, and for just getting started, that’s enough.