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DALER-ROWNEY
Brush Making


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Making
No machines
could handle the precious sable hair and fashion it into perfectly shaped brushes like
these experienced artists' brushmakers.
Each week they produce 30,000 brushes in more than 500 types, shapes and sizes - and every
one is made by hand.
Ounce for ounce sable is worth its weight in gold. It arrives in small single-length
bundles, pre-cut from 25mm to 57mm. Only the best quality hair is used, the finest
reserved for the Diana range - acknowledged worldwide as the creme de la creme of Kolinsky
sable brushes.
Although the hair is pre-dressed when it arrives in Dartmouth, it is combed again and
again to remove any small tangles. |
Brushes - In The Making
Since each hair naturally tapers to a fine tip, single strays
facing the wrong way are picked out with tweezers and discarded. It's a process known as
de-blunting and one which requires the eyesight of a desert hawk.
The hair is then cut to length according to the brush size, and just the right amount is
fed into a metal ferrule. Too much and the hairs will splay. Too little and they won't fit
snugly.
The brushmaker feeds the hair into a small brass cylinder, taps it to bring each strand
into line, then lifts and twists it out of the cannon with a diaphragm. This action pulls
the outside hairs down, producing the candle-shaped knot. Brush heads to a size 9 are
secured with a dab of glue. Larger sizes are hand-tied with cotton thread.
The knot of hair is then fed into its ferrule, measured precisely for length, and glued in
place with a touch of epoxy resin.
The ferrule is heated briefly over a Bunsen burner before the birch wood handle is slipped
into place. As the metal cools, it grips tight.
To make absolutely sure it's securely in place, the brush is fed by hand into a small
vice, the only machine in the room. This hand-operated device crimps the metal and creates
the distinctive decorative border at the top of the ferrule, called the knurl.
The handle is printed with the appropriate model name and size, using a small printing
press - the only other machine in the workshop.
In its final stages, each brush head is worked with a metal rod
against a leather strap to tease out any loose hairs, and checked again for blunts.
Finally the brush is dipped in a weak solution of gum arabic and brought to a fine point.
Nothing beats a superior quality sable for pointing ability, and thanks to the microscopic
filaments along each hair, it holds a wash better than any other brush.
But in the search for a more economical alternative, Daler-Rowney's experimental work with
polyester fibres produced the pioneering Dalon series. In performance and handling the
Dalon is considered by watercolour artists to be the first serious rival to the sable.
To meet the particular demands of working in
acrylics, Daler-Rowney developed the Cryla range. A unique blend of six different
synthetic fibres combine to create a brush with the durability and resilience required by
both fine art painters and decorative craft artists.

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Synthetic brushes are hand-made using
similar techniques, except that filaments do not need the same careful dressing as natural
hair, and the head shape is formed inside the metal cannon, rather than by twisting
through a diaphragm. Otherwise the process is
equally labour intensive and demands the same dexterity to ensure a pristine finish. |

Full copyright of all information on this page belongs to
Daler-Rowney

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