Description
da Vinci Brush Soap Tin 4433
The da Vinci KERNSEIFE is a special soap that cleans and maintains artist’s brush heads. This cleaning soap is vegetable-based and vegan. It comes in a round metal tin for easy use. Through its reconditioning action, this special soap cleans and maintains the brush head, keeping natural hair, bristles, or synthetic fiber elastic and smooth.
- Length x Width x Height: 90 mm x 90 mm x 25 mm
- 85 g brush soap in a round metal tin
Cleaning tips: Wash water-soluble paints as well as acrylic paint from the brush with water and vegetable soap when still wet. After using special cleaning solvents, treat the brush head with soap and water. Last but not least, form the brush into its original shape and always allow it to dry thoroughly.
Ingredients (INCI): Sodium Palmate, Aqua, Sodium Palm Kernelate, Palm Kernel Acid, Parfum, Sodium Chloride, Glycerin, Tetrasodium EDTA, Tetrasodium Etidronate, Citral, Geraniol, Citronellol, Limonene.
Details:
- Reconditioning soap
- Maintains the brush-head
- Keeps natural hair, bristles, or synthetic fibre elastic and smooth
- Vegan
Tips on how to clean your paintbrushes:
To enjoy our products as long as possible, please obey the following fundamental rules:
- Water-soluble colours should be washed out with water.
- Acrylic colour, as long as it is wet, should be washed out with water. When dried up it can only be dissolved with special cleaning agents.
- Oil colours should be wiped off thoroughly with a piece of cloth and, where appropriate cleaned with a special cleanser.
- Hairs, bristles and synthetic fibres should be cleaned with a special soap (da Vinci soap 4033 or 4433), that cleans and maintains the brush head. Use vegetable oil soap and warm water until the soap begins to produce a white lather. Do not use strong grease-removing soaps! Natural hair tends to break if it is are missing its protective fat contents. By that, you elevate the life as well as the suppleness of your brushes.
- To wash out the brush, rub the hair body of the brush carefully and remove the remains of pigment that stick to the edge of the ferrule.
- Afterwards, wipe the brush with a fine piece of cloth and bring it to its original shape. Artists call this procedure “dressing”.
- Let the brush dry completely before you use it again. Don’t put it on the radiator to dry. There the hair will dry too quickly, the handle will shrink, and the brush head will come loose.