Results 1 to 10 of 18
Thread: Why use synthetic hairs?
-
02-23-2014, 05:28 PM #1
Why use synthetic hairs?
Everywhere I go i hear people saying that synthetical brushes jsut don't do the job.
I have never used one but on Internet forums I rea a lot about them.
The only experience i have is that from Boar vs Badger.
And boar doesn't absorb a well as Badger.
I can imagine synthetic does't absorb better.
IS this so???
DriesAfter 3 months you look like you've fought a cat, after a year you may say you get it.
After 3 years you are even better and as long as you live, you are becoming a expert...
-
02-23-2014, 05:56 PM #2
I have not tried modern synthetic brushes, (tried an old nylon effort, which was not much use) but I had imagined that their attraction is not that they would necessarily be better than Boar, Badger or for that matter Horse brushes, but rather they would be attractive to people who are adverse to using products derived from animals.
I guess it's time to try a quality synthetic brush.
-
02-23-2014, 07:14 PM #3
- Join Date
- Mar 2012
- Location
- Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada
- Posts
- 17,304
Thanked: 3226I don't think synthetic shave brushes are meant to replace any of the other types of shave brush types. They offer a different experience and certain advantages and disadvantages the others do not.
My first experience using a synthetic brush was with The Body Shops brush and that put me right of synthetics. Somehow I wound up trying a Muhle synthetic travel brush and really enjoying it. That was followed by a Mule V2 XL synthetic silver tip fiber brush with similar stellar results.
Once you get to know how to load the synthetic brush, just as you have to learn how with the other types, I found it will quickly and easily lather any hard soap, cream or shave stick that I have tried with it. It also has the advantage of drying faster than other types of brushes which for travel might be an advantage.
I really enjoy the synthetic Muhles I have just as much as my cheap Omega boar or my Simpsons Manchurian. The amount of water a brush retains does not matter to me as I start with a shaken out brush and load from there. If it needs more water just dip the tips in water to add some. You just add more or less water depending on the brush.
BobLife is a terminal illness in the end
-
02-23-2014, 11:45 PM #4
For bowl lathering creams, I actually prefer my Muhle synthetic most of the time. The newest generation of synthetics really hold their own against natural hair brushes, so much so that, I suspect that, in 20 years most brushes will be synthetics, and we'll only be using badger and boar for nostalga, not performance.
or, put another way, they're good now, and only getting better, so if you want a synthetic, go for it, just be sure to get a good one from a quality manufacturer.
-
02-27-2014, 08:07 AM #5
I use a Muhle Silver Tip Fibre in 23mm and am very pleased with it. One further advantage, besides what has been said here already is, that it dries much quicker. It is said that brushes of natural hair can mold if not stored and dried properly. I don't have problems with soap residue either. Whenever I run my finger through the "hair" of my brush under a lamp I don't see any soap powder flying around.
The badgers that are used for shaving brushes are bred in China. The Chinese eat them, so they are not bred and initially killed solely for their pelts but I'm sure life in a breeding station in China is not a piece of cake for the badgers either. If you have an ethic problem with that a synthetic brush is right for you. You can make great lather with them once you've gotten the amount of water right.Last edited by OldSalt; 02-27-2014 at 08:09 AM.
-
02-27-2014, 10:52 AM #6
I bought a Muhle Black Fibre a couple of years ago and have hardly touched my badgers since, even though they are reasonably high quality ones. To me, they don't compare to the Muhle Lather Monster!
Thinking about trying one of the new silvertip fibre Muhles next
Gareth
-
02-27-2014, 12:28 PM #7
Synthetic Thread: http://straightrazorpalace.com/brush...synthetic.html
It does not have anything to do with absorption, just performance. You do have to learn how to use them. The newest synthetics are excellent. They make excellent travel brushes too.
My Bethlehem Olivewood Handle with a Whipped Dog 24mmx52mm Synthetic Knot. I used it again today.
Bob
-
02-27-2014, 01:44 PM #8
- Join Date
- Mar 2012
- Location
- Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada
- Posts
- 17,304
Thanked: 3226I really don't understand anyone saying that the current generation of synthetic shave brushes can't to the job. It is my experience that they certainly can and then some. I can understand someone not liking a synthetic because it does not feel/act like their favourite natural hair shave brush or that they are just a plain old traditionalist but not on the ability to get the job done.
BobLife is a terminal illness in the end
-
02-27-2014, 05:20 PM #9
At one time they said the automobile could never replace the horse.
No matter how many men you kill you can't kill your successor-Emperor Nero
-
02-27-2014, 05:21 PM #10
I agree with Bob, unless they are simply brush snobs, I'd imagine anyone who dismisses synthetic brushes completely must have last tried one years ago. The synthetic brushes of even 10 years ago were best suited for brushing sawdust off of your work bench. Today, if you're going to spend less than $20 on a brush, you're probably still best served by a boar or horse. But for the price where quality badgers start, you can get a pretty amazing synthetic. I'm still a mostly a boar brush man, but I think many of todays synthetics are the real deal.