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Has anyone successfully repaired a shedding Striping brush? I recently found a few new brushes and they are all dried out and shedding like crazy. Just sliding a brush across the back of my have results in a few loose hairs. Any hope, or just discard them?
I thought maybe I could inject a small amount of superglue near the handle but the glue may capillary up into the hairs. Then I thought about soaking them in oil for 50 years!
-------------------- Ron Costa Sign and Design 28 Ingerson Road Jefferson, NH 0358 Posts: 620 | From: New Hampshire | Registered: Oct 2002
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Superglue them to your cheeks, Ron-they'd blend in with your goatee!
I wish I knew the answer for you. I'd be inclined to try the oil or the glue, with whichever consequences arose-either should be better than what you have...
-------------------- "Stewey" on chat
"...there are no limits when you aim for perfection..." Jonathan Livingston Seagull Posts: 7014 | From: Highgrove via Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia | Registered: Dec 2002
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I knew an old sign guy in the mid 70s who told me a trick that I never tired, but it might work. He used a hypodermic needle to inject down into the ferrule some shellac. Shellac is not misible with water or lac thinner and is reduced with alcohol. He swore by the stuff and claimed it made his quills last alot longer. I personally just kept them clean and when they either split-tailed or started shedding, broke down and bought some new ones. You might try this tick on one and see how it glues it back together? I think the superglue sets up way too fast and too easy to get some into the upper bristles causing additional pproblems. but who knows with a syringe.
-------------------- Preston McCall 112 Rim Road Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501 text: 5056607370 Posts: 1552 | From: Santa Fe, New Mexico | Registered: Nov 1998
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These are new old brushes that have laid around for a long time, correct? I've run across a few in my day. Like you said they shed like crazy. I've found if you vigorously clean them in lacquer thinner and oil them, some will be suprisingly useable after the initial shedding and some, unfortunately just keep on shedding. I don't thing gluing is going to solve the problem. If you looak at the hairs that are coming off the the brush, I think you'ss see they aren't pulling out of the ferrule but breaking off at the ferrule. All brushes loose some hair over time. You see it when you use them. These haven't had any useage to kick those broken hairs out.
-------------------- George Perkins Millington,TN. goatwell@bigriver.net
"I started out with nothing and still have most of it left"
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You're spot on, George. I thought of soaking in a hair conditioner but neetsfoot or olive oil may do the trick I'll experiment and get back here with the results.
-------------------- Ron Costa Sign and Design 28 Ingerson Road Jefferson, NH 0358 Posts: 620 | From: New Hampshire | Registered: Oct 2002
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If the hair is breaking off at the ferrule, they may be the victims of hair eating bugs. New brushes should be kept in air tight containers or at least with some camphor balls. Bill
-------------------- Bill Riedel Riedel Sign Co., Inc. 15 Warren Street Little Ferry, N.J. 07643 billsr@riedelsignco.com Posts: 2953 | From: Little Ferry, New Jersey, USA | Registered: Feb 1999
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quote:Originally posted by Joey Madden: Oh yeah Bobbie
Guess where their living ? in beards?
-------------------- Len Mort Signmaker1.com 11 Juniper Drive Millbury, MA 508-865-2382 "A Good Business Sign, is A Sign of Good Business"(1957) Posts: 811 | From: Millbury, Ma | Registered: Dec 2006
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