Description
Masters Brush Cleaner
Since 1979 people have relied on The Original B&J “The Masters” Brush Cleaner and Preserver to take special care in cleaning and conditioning their artist brushes. “The Masters” brush soap takes the effort out of cleaning up!
How To Use “The Masters” Brush Cleaner
The Best Cleaner “The Masters” removes oils, acrylics, watercolors, stains, and varnishes. And it helps prevent paint build-up in the ferrule. It also prevents the hardening and build-up common with today’s acrylic paints. “The Masters”® works beautifully on the finest sable and bristle brushes, and it makes painting with nylon and synthetic brushes a snap. It conditions the brush to hold more color and helps lay down a smoother more even flow. Use “The Masters”® after every session to keep your brushes like new.
The Best Preserver
“The Masters”® was formulated with a cosmetic laboratory to help condition and preserve your brushes with the same care and thought as the products you use on your hair. It keeps your brushes like new so they’ll retain the same natural snap and luster – for consistent performance – as the day you bought them.
The Best Restorer
Don’t throw away old brushes with dried-on oil paint, no matter how hard the bristles are. “The Masters”® restores old, stiff brushes to like new condition. Simply wet with water, swirl, lather, and let the brush sit a while before rinsing. Repeat the process until all the paint is removed. Your brushes will be reconditioned and you will have a new old brush.
For Cleaning
- Wipe the brush to remove excess paint.
- Wet brush and/or “The Masters”® with water.
- Swirl the brush in “The Masters”® and work into a lather.
- Rinse with clean water.
- Repeat until the brush is clean (the lather will be white). You can even clean one brush after another without removing the previous colors from “The Masters” soap first.
For Preserving
- Clean brushes as above
- Leave clear lather on bristles, shape, and allow to dry.
- Shake powder off bristles when ready to use again.
For Restoring
- Clean brush as above, but use hot water.
- Allow lather to remain on bristles for a few minutes.
- If necessary, tap bristles on a hard surface to work the paint out.
- To clean paint from ferrule, allow lather to remain on the bristles for several hours, and repeat the cleaning process.
- Leave clear lather on the bristles, shape the brush, and allow it to dry.