|
Martin/F. Weber's
Winter Harvest Kolinsky
|
The Hair
Like Fredrick Weber's original
set, only the thickest hairs resulting from the harvesting of male kolinsky
in Russia's coldest months (January and February) are used. Males as the
primary hunters of the food for the family unit have developed thicker
hair over the centuries than the female of the species, which spend more
of the winter in the den protecting their young.
Arrangement
Only craftsmen who have
more than thirty years experience in natural hair arrangement are trusted
with preparing these brushes. Each individual brush is then
carefully inspected by the factory manager.
Performance
We have found no kolinsky
remotely comparable.
Snap
Unparalleled
Point
Back off the pressure and
you'd think you were painting with a single hair. As a true Kolinsky Brush
you need not flick the brush to get the point. We have found
that if an artist needs to flick the brush to get a point that this often
results in paint flying in many undesired directions.
The Price
You don't have to be royalty to afford it.
Brief Technical Description
All brushes are dome shape in design
when dry and fine pointed when wet. The belly of the brush is 1/3 of the way up from the top
of the ferrule.
The ferrule is a seamless nickel plated brass ferrule with deep crimping.
There are four coats of lacquer with two coats of gloss varnish on the handle
with two hours of drying time between each coat. Short graduated length handles
as per size of the ferrule.
All Kolinsky brushes have tied bundles since these brushes
are mainly for watercolor. The epoxy used is the strongest available. It withstands any
soaking of the brush.
|