Princeton 3/4" angle shader that came in my SketchBox. |
A long time ago, I bought a set of Kuretake waterbrushes in various sizes, and it included a so-called “flat wash” brush. Although it is shaped like a traditional flat brush for making wide washes, it’s too narrow for that purpose, and I found the flow too inconsistent for something like a wash. (If I really cared about making a true watercolor wash, that’s one time I’d choose a real brush.) It seemed useless to me.
The "flat wash" waterbrush -- useless until now.
I realized I needed something extra-sharp – and the lightbulb over my head turned on again! I got out the pricey, professional Japanese hair-cutting shears that I have been using to cut my own hair since the pandemic began. At the risk of dulling those expensive (but sharpenable) blades, I cut right through those bristles. Instead of a straight angled cut, I curved the cut slightly so that it would be more like a dagger shape.
Hacked with Japanese hair shears
At the top of the sketchbook page below, I made a few marks to show the wide range my hacked waterbrush can make. My original intention was to finish features and details with colored pencils, but the point on the brush was fine enough that I could paint the eyes, eyebrows and mustache. Perhaps not my best portrait work, but the hack gets an A+!
Red marks show the variety of marks the hacked brush makes. (Earthsworld reference photo) |
Good thinking. I had one of the flat water brushes too and found it to be useless. I don't know where it is any more. This seems to work well for you.
ReplyDeleteI might even get a second one and try another experiment! ;-)
Delete