Rosemary Brushes


Matt and I have been having an argument about whether or not Rosemary & Co. makes good brushes. I had previously taken a recommendation of his and bought a set of five brushes, and subsequently fell in love with brush again. Unfortunately, he has recently redacted his endorsement, and the knife and flaming baton throwing has ensued:

Here is my response to a commentor on the fence about whether to buy these brushes or not:

I have to say Matt and I have been having disagreements about the Rosemary brushes. I was in your same position about six months ago: didn’t have a lot of money to spend but wanted to try a LOT of different kinds of brushes to figure out exactly what sizes and shapes I might like in a brush. For twenty-five bucks, I got five different sized kolinsky series 33 brushes and a watercolor brush. The watercolor brush was decent, but the kolinsky brushes changed what had previously been a firm hatred of brush into a lusty love affair. I f*cking LOVE brush now.

Unlike Matt, I haven’t used a lot of brushes, so I don’t personally know how W&N and Raphael brushes compare, but the complaints I’ve read about Rosemary brushes seem pretty minor things when you’re just starting out and trying to figure out how a brush actually works. If it doesn’t hold as much ink, you’ll just have to dip more. And I’ve never had a problem getting a point or a thick line, or of them splitting except under the greatest pressure. Usually I just get sort of a drybrush look when I apply a lot of pressure.

I still think that Rosemary brushes are an excellent brush for their price, and as I was just saying to Matt: they’re the sort of brush you want to get a lot of just to see how a brush feels. They may not make artists cream their pants like apparently a good W&N does, but they seem like a good start to me.

Plus, once you figure out what size you like best (like how I figured how drastically different a 5 is from a 2, and that I really prefer a 5, which I though I’d prefer the thinner brush!), you can always go out and buy a nicer one in another brand.

As for me? I don’t want to spend $10-$20 on a single brush just to test it out and possibly never use it again! Some of the rosemary’s I bought sit unused (like the 0), but I spent less than $5 on it, so I really don’t mind.

Seriously, for twenty or thirty bucks, you should try a selection and see what you think. I love mine, and I love the faith they’ve given me in brush again that had been destroyed by a BAD WINDSOR AND NEWTON.

So there. (sticks tongue out at Matt)

——

I use a Rosemary Pure Sable Kolinsky Series 33 #5 and #2, btw.

6 Comments


6 Comments

  1. Matt Bernier  •  Jan 11, 2010 @1:54 pm

    God I love you.

  2. Rivkah  •  Jan 11, 2010 @2:12 pm

    I love you, too!!!! :D

  3. Anonymous  •  Jan 11, 2010 @2:21 pm

    I've wanted to try these brushes since you mentioned them in your original post, but the shipping and handling ($10 to the US) is causing me to put it off. It's not unfair since I know airmail overseas is annoyingly high, but it ends up canceling out the low price of the brushes for me. T_T Maybe if I order 5 or 6 brushes it'll all even out. *thinks*

    P.S. Check out Pavlov's Dream on Zuda, by me and )

  4. lilrivkah  •  Jan 11, 2010 @3:29 pm

    I always order sort of in bulk from them because of that. It's a £5.00 flat rate to the US (about $8) no matter how much you buy. For one brush, that's a lot, but a bunch, it still evens out. :)

  5. lilrivkah  •  Jan 11, 2010 @3:37 pm

    Btw, Pavlov's Dream is gorgeous! Those colors are what I can only DREAM I could do! I did find the storytelling at the beginning a little disjointed and inconsistent (the switch from pictograms to words was jarring, and the brother seems a little flat, though the little girl is cute!), but it started to smooth out in the last pages, so I'm looking forward to the next set!

  6. Anonymous  •  Jan 12, 2010 @8:03 pm

    Glad you like it overall, and people seem to really like the colors. ^^

    The pictogram switch does seem to be hit or miss, so it's something that might be edited later.

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