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Thread: Badger or Boar

  1. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by alschepis View Post
    How do you decide weather to use a Badger or a Boar?
    If 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.

  2. #12
    Senior Member xiaotuzi's Avatar
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    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"

  3. #13
    Senior Member blabbermouth outback's Avatar
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    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.
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    Mike

  4. #14
    Member Badgerstate's Avatar
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    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.

  5. #15
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    There 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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  6. #16
    Senior Member blabbermouth Steel's Avatar
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    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

  7. #17
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    I 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.

  8. #18
    what Dad calls me nun2sharp's Avatar
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    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.
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