Flick the water out (hold on to your brush....as it may slip out of your hand ... I had one slip and cracked my sink...the handle was fine, though) and then brush lightly over a towel - lightly is the word here. I do this for so many years and never had any issue. I believe it is the normal procedure for drying a brush. The stand it up or hang it from a stand, never put a moist brush in a cabinet or such before it is not completely dried out.
(09-26-2019, 10:39 PM)andrewjs18 Wrote: I've been using the same method as mentioned in the article linked to above for the better part of a decade without any issues...
https://www.classicshaving.com/blogs/sha...difference
I've also been doing this for many years without any damage.
(09-28-2019, 02:01 PM)rudyvey Wrote: Flick the water out (hold on to your brush....as it may slip out of your hand ... I had one slip and cracked my sink...the handle was fine, though) and then brush lightly over a towel - lightly is the word here. I do this for so many years and never had any issue. I believe it is the normal procedure for drying a brush. The stand it up or hang it from a stand, never put a moist brush in a cabinet or such before it is not completely dried out.The expert has spoken! Interesting to me that you are ok with standing the brush up. While I understand how evaporation works, with so many knots increasing in density, I sometimes feel that if I don't hang the brush then the water will never evaporate.
Users browsing this thread: