1500S Silverwhite® Short Handle
Acrylic & Watercolor | Short Handle
Quality ♦♦♦♦♢ Stiffness ♦♢♢♢♢ |
Silverwhite® fine art brushes feature high-quality Japanese synthetic filaments that are soft but springy. Many synthetic brushes aren’t capable of holding as much paint as natural hair brushes, but Silverwhite® was specially designed with multi-diameter filaments that have tiny ridges, allowing the brush to capture and carry color without pooling on your painting.
Silverwhite® will perform just like a natural sable, but at a fraction of the cost! Artists know to expect fine tapered points and chiseled edges. These brushes are absorbent and easy to control and work perfectly for watercolors, acrylics, and gouache. |
1500S Silverwhite® Round
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1502S Silverwhite® Bright
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1503S Silverwhite® Filbert
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1504S Silverwhite® Fan
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1506S Silverwhite® Angle
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1507S Silverwhite® Script Liner
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SW-1520S Silverwhite® Short Handle
3 piece set |
SW-1521S Silverwhite® Short Handle
4 piece set |
SW-1522S Silverwhite® Foundation Basic
6 piece set |
Specific Way to Clean the Brush:
1. Wipe as much paint off of the brush head as you can before cleaning.
2. Lay flat to dry.
3. Be sure to clean your brush after each painting session. Letting paint dry in the brush can cause it to not perform as expected.
4. Never leave your brushes sitting in water for any length of time as this can eventually break down the epoxy barrier in the ferrule leading to cracked handles. 5. Rinsing the head of the brush with warm water should be enough to remove most watercolor, gouache, acrylics, inks or dyes but an artist-grade brush cleaner can be used to make sure all traces of pigment have been cleaned off.
1. Wipe as much paint off of the brush head as you can before cleaning.
2. Lay flat to dry.
3. Be sure to clean your brush after each painting session. Letting paint dry in the brush can cause it to not perform as expected.
4. Never leave your brushes sitting in water for any length of time as this can eventually break down the epoxy barrier in the ferrule leading to cracked handles. 5. Rinsing the head of the brush with warm water should be enough to remove most watercolor, gouache, acrylics, inks or dyes but an artist-grade brush cleaner can be used to make sure all traces of pigment have been cleaned off.