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Thread: Badger or Boar
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12-27-2017, 11:26 AM #11
- Join Date
- Dec 2015
- Location
- North Dakota
- Posts
- 1,455
Thanked: 250If I'm reading your question right, you want to know how I decide on a given morning which brush to use. In my case the deciding factor is which soap I will be using. For hard to lather soaps like Williams or some of my soap concoctions I go for the boar and work the living snot out of the puck. For Obie's 1st and 2nd tier soaps I use my best badgers. I have one cheap badger that I use for exclusively for two foul smelling creams.
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12-27-2017, 11:39 AM #12
Lately I've been using a Semogue boar a little more than my badger brushes. Granted, I haven't experienced any really expensive badger brushes, but I do have a small collection of decent ones that work just fine. It's fun to have a few kinds to choose from, it's usually a game-time decision along with which soap or cream. I also have a Vie-Long horsehair brush that I enjoy very much. I think for me, the boar has the best performance-to-cost ratio.
"Go easy"
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12-27-2017, 12:11 PM #13
I'm like Benz, it depends in which soap I'm going to use.
But I'm quite partial to Black Badger, brushes.
I have a variety of different types, sizes, and lofts of brushes, and all work equally well with any soap or cream.
A cheap way to try different brushes (as I did ) is look for them at antique stores and flea markets. If their in good condition, you can clean them up and use them, if not, you can buy replacement knots ( of your choice ) and put new knots in them. Or make your own, as many have done here, as well as myself.
Mike
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12-27-2017, 02:32 PM #14
Personal preference. Some like the softness and tradition of badger, others like the scritch and low cost of a boar. Personally, Im of the latter.
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12-28-2017, 12:06 AM #15
- Join Date
- Nov 2016
- Location
- Chicago Suburbs
- Posts
- 1,098
Thanked: 292There are four types of shaving brushes in common use: boar, badger, horse hair and synthetic. If you get a good one (and by good, I am not talking about quality, not price), either one of the four can do a great job. I have and use several brushes of each type.
Boar brushes are generally inexpensive and can do a great job --- once they are broken in. I like the backbone of a boar brush when lathering hard soaps.
Badger brushes, especially silvertips, have a soft face feel. However, unless the knot is densely packed, the brush may be floppy. Of course, dense brushes require more hair for a given size knot, so they tend to be more expensive. You can compensate for a floppy brush by holding the brush by the knot rather than by the handle. This is an old barber's trick. I love using badger brushes when lathering creams. Creams do not require the backbone of a boar and I love the soft face feel.
Horsehair brushes generally are not as soft as a badger and do not have the back bone of a boar. If you are interested in one, I suggest you avoid the cheaper ones that tend to be 65% tail hair and 35% mane hair. The moderately priced ones are usually 50% mane/50% tail and are a little softer. Horse hair brushes offer a good compromise of the characteristics of the two main competitors.
A few years ago, synthetic brushes were designed to be cheap brushes. Technology has improved and there are some great brushes available for very reasonable prices. I have a acrylic handle brush with a gamechanger/boss style knot that is nearly as soft as a badger, yet has the backbone of a boar. Thus, it combines the best of both major competitors It will produce a great lather with with any cream, croap, or hard soap I use. It may be the most versatile brush I have. If I was on a tight budget and could only own a single inexpensive brush, I would be satisfied with that one.
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12-28-2017, 01:49 AM #16
Yeah, buy them both and see what you like. That’s what I did and use boar brushes almost exclusively today. They just keep getting better and better with use. On the other hand, if I didn’t have a selection of badger brushes in my past I would always wonder.
What a curse be a dull razor; what a prideful comfort a sharp one
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01-01-2018, 09:02 PM #17
- Join Date
- Dec 2017
- Location
- Humble, Texas
- Posts
- 45
Thanked: 2I have two simpson brushes that my grandfather gave to me, he's got quite a few things and loved seeing my interest in wet shaving. The first brush I started on and bought myself was boar, although because as stated here that I didn't give it time to break in I am not going to attempt a critique of it. I feel like Simpson makes exquisite badger brushes,however. I personally wouldn't pay what he did for them, at least not yet, but the quality does seem to merit the price.
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01-01-2018, 10:10 PM #18
Get a good boar brush, after a while after the bristles start splitting you will have one helluva brush. Also get a Tweezerman badger, its not premium by any means but it is very inexpensive, I have had both for umpteen years now and they are doing fine. You can always move up once you know what you want.
It is easier to fool people than to convince them they have been fooled. Twain