After nearly two decades and quite a few brushes, I've whittled my "collection" down to two, but am still wanting to find others that may address some of the idiosyncrasies I have with these.
So, short of me driving the ~2 hours up to Pasteur's and fondling whatever brush selection they have that I might do some day, I'm relying on you folks to give me some experiential advice.
Omega Pro 10049 26mm knot x 59mm loft - I've had this for many years. It's decently soft after all the use, it eats up soap and is occasionally used by my wife. I seldom use it myself anymore because it uses more soap than I need for my shaves. I sometimes press it into service to use with triple milled/hard soaps like MdC.
Razorock Bruce Plissoft 24mm knot x 57mm loft - makes plenty of lather for my 2-3 pass shaves, comfortable on my face, no irritation, but clanks around in my soap containers when trying to get at the soap ring and could probably stand to go with a slightly smaller knot, maybe 22mm.
I'm looking for a brush that:
So, short of me driving the ~2 hours up to Pasteur's and fondling whatever brush selection they have that I might do some day, I'm relying on you folks to give me some experiential advice.
Omega Pro 10049 26mm knot x 59mm loft - I've had this for many years. It's decently soft after all the use, it eats up soap and is occasionally used by my wife. I seldom use it myself anymore because it uses more soap than I need for my shaves. I sometimes press it into service to use with triple milled/hard soaps like MdC.
Razorock Bruce Plissoft 24mm knot x 57mm loft - makes plenty of lather for my 2-3 pass shaves, comfortable on my face, no irritation, but clanks around in my soap containers when trying to get at the soap ring and could probably stand to go with a slightly smaller knot, maybe 22mm.
I'm looking for a brush that:
- costs less than $30 (before shipping)
- 24mm or less knot diameter - I've found a larger diameter brush just wastes soap. I typically only do 2-3 passes and still have a bunch of soap that goes down the drain even with a 4-5 second loading.
- Synthetic fibers
- Handle that won't bruise finger tips when trying to scour soap out of the container or during bowl lathering (I use a Timeless that has tall walls)
- Open to bulb or fan shape - I typically swirl the lather on my face for the first pass and then paint on lather for subsequent passes
- Backbone somewhere between that of boar and mid-range badger. I want to be able to easily load soft and hard soaps, but would consider dedicated brushes for each type of soap consistency. I don't use shave creams since I don't know of any that compete with the top tier artisan soaps I use (Grooming Dept., Arianna & Evans, Barrister & Mann, Ethos).