I am going to take a shot at this. I believe there are two topics here, should your brush be completely dry before using again and should you hang or use a stand. I believe marketing may play a part in both of these. To begin with I currently have 9 brushes. I have 2 more Wiborg's which will be completed in July, Today ordered my fifth Shavemac, and I am on a waiting list for 2 Varlets when production begins again. I agree with "CHSeifert" the drying issue may be vanity because custom badger brushes are not cheap. So maybe it is mind over matter. I always make sure that my brushes are completely dry before I use them again. However with so many brushes the drying issue is a moot point. I do not have a strict rotation routine because I use some brushes specifically for certain soaps and creams. Yes I believe a brush should be completely dried but I think it is paramount that the brush be throughly rinsed. Over time soap build up can do damage to a badger brush. I can smell each of my dried brushes and not smell any fragrance from the last shave. Rinsing is an important last step.
I flick my brushes, gently rub the tip on a soft terry cloth towel and stand it up. I live in LA we have very low humidity on average and within an hour or two my brush is about 85% dry. It will dry just as fast standing as it would hanging. It is called wicking. Someone raised the question of high humidity in various geographical areas. I may be wrong but if you live in these areas most people today have air-conditioning. If you do, air-conditioned air has basically no humidity at all. In these areas in the winter heaters create dry air as well. If you do not have air conditioning I stand corrected but I am sure everybody has heat.
While it may not be completely necessary I always make sure my brush is completely dry before I use it again
I flick my brushes, gently rub the tip on a soft terry cloth towel and stand it up. I live in LA we have very low humidity on average and within an hour or two my brush is about 85% dry. It will dry just as fast standing as it would hanging. It is called wicking. Someone raised the question of high humidity in various geographical areas. I may be wrong but if you live in these areas most people today have air-conditioning. If you do, air-conditioned air has basically no humidity at all. In these areas in the winter heaters create dry air as well. If you do not have air conditioning I stand corrected but I am sure everybody has heat.
While it may not be completely necessary I always make sure my brush is completely dry before I use it again