I'm a total newb to painting, and am painting some shutters right now. I grabbed both a regular bristle paint brush, and a foam brush.
After using the foam brush, I guess I just can't see any benefit the bristle brushes have over the foam ones. The foam ones seem to move easier, leave a smoother finish, etc. Am I missing something here? Maybe the foam ones were more expensive? (can't remember how much these were)
I agree with Slick, the foam brush should not even be close to a quality brush, more than likely the brush you are using is a cheap quality brush, and to a professional could not even be considered a worthy throw away.
People often want to go as cheap as possible, and when it comes to tools it is often a bad idea.
I've used both for various projects. If I have to paint a small bit of touch up and I'm feeling lazy, I'll use a foam brush and throw it away. Once you use a foam brush and a good bristle brush you quickly realize why the pros use bristle.
Try 'em both out and see what you think. It's a cheap experiment and if you're like me you won't believe us until you try it yourself :laughing:
I've used both for various projects. If I have to paint a small bit of touch up and I'm feeling lazy, I'll use a foam brush and throw it away. Once you use a foam brush and a good bristle brush you quickly realize why the pros use bristle.
Try 'em both out and see what you think. It's a cheap experiment and if you're like me you won't believe us until you try it yourself :laughing:
Okay, I'm going to be needing more brushes real soon (the foam one didn't keep its shape 100%, and I didn't even paint that much with it).
When I bought them, I basically just bought a bristle brush and a foam brush, and got what was ~ 2nd cheapest level. When getting a better bristle brush to compare, how do I even know what kind to get? Brands? Prices? Other factors?
I'm painting many things - front door, storm shutters (aluminum), regular shutters, aluminum gutter down spouts, and mortar/stucco.
Most anything with the Purdy name on it won't be too bad
Even the de-spec'd ones at Home Creapo aren't horrible
The Paint Store ones are best though
The XL Glide would be a good choice
I'd suggest a 2 1/2" sash brush (angle) as if you take care of it, it will last you for years, and that's kind of the "go-to" size and shape
2" is OK if the 2 1/2 seems to big or too much
I prefer a 3", but I do this all the time
My DIY painter (the Mrs. likes to paint our house) prefers a 2"
Personally I like the Coronas (the Cortez)
They are a little stiffer than the Purdys, which IMO helps you paint with the tips rather than mushing it in there
Thanks for the advice guys, I *definitely* noticed a difference with a higher quality brush. I didn't get a purdy one, but wow were they expensive!!! No wonder I think a foam brush is better than my 3/$1.00 brush packs lol! I got a better paint brush, and immediately noticed a huge difference, and it was probably one that you guys would call a 'throw away', but it blew my ghetto brushes out of the water!
I would've got the purdy, but couldn't swallow the price (it was low $20's for the size I wanted). I got something cheaper, but it still waaaaaay outperformed my other brushes, and will definitely be sufficient for my 'diy' needs.
Next time you need a brush, you still may want to consider a Purdy or Wooster top-line brush. Properly cleaned and stored after each use, a single brush can last a DIY-er a lifetime, making the initial price considerably less important.
I should just say, with my tail tucked between my legs, that I got a purdy today and you guys were dead on point!!! I think it's called a 3" XL swan, if that sounds right....
On that note though, given that the brush was like $18, I tried cleaning it as best I could. I did 1 coat of satin red latex on my new door, and went to clean it asap. However, I sat there cleaning it with soap and hot water forever, and I can still see a red hue in the top bristles where they are white. Does that mean I didn't clean enough? I sat there with it in a bucket of soapy, hot water for like 5 minutes, cleaning as thoroughly as I could, and I couldn't get the tops of the bristles back to their factory white/cream color.... I don't want to ruin my purdy, it owns!!!
If you are using hot water and soap, and the water running out of the bristles is clear, you are done.
Also, a few more tips:
Purchase and use a brush comb during, and after, cleaning. These are only a couple of bucks at any store that sells paint supplies. This will keep the bristles straight, and with a good shape.
If you haven't thrown it away already, use the cardboard thing the brush came wrapped in to store the brush. This will hold the brush in the proper shape.
Thanks for the tips guys! Nah I didn't throw it out because it said it was a reusable holster thing, but I'm looking at it thinking 'you're a piece of cardboard'.... it's on the floor of the garage and would've gone in the trash lol! But I'll save it, my purdy was not giving off any water besides clear when I was done, and it's hanging from a nail so it should keep shape but I'll start using that sheath thing. Do I need to wait til it's 100% dry to put it in there or just dry to the point where I can't shake any water out of it anymore then a quick paper towel blotting?
Keep it in the sheath immediately after washing. Spin as much water out of the brush as you can, then comb it, then hang it (or store it laying flat). never have the weight resting on the bristles.
Damn that box must be worth a pretty penny!! Gonna have to grab me one of those combs to keep my purdy clean!
I just did my final satin red coat on my front door earlier today, even with the purdy I'm still getting kinda substantial brush marks, must be a skill level thing :laughing:
Yeah I totally *meant* to learn about these paint extenders, ended up not using them, and kinda regret it... I've installed the knobs/deadbolt today, prolly put the hinges on and install tomorrow. I'm gonna hold onto the old POS door though, because if every time I enter my house all I see is brush strokes, I'm gonna need to take it back down and sand the hell out of it, get the extender, and recoat again!
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