Shaving 2: Brushes

Muhle silvertip brush
How do you prepare a lather?
In classic shaving, you have a choice of cheap plain boar brushes ($15-25), or badger brushes. Badger brushes are generally broken down into, ‘pure badger’ ($23-40), ‘best badger’ ($40-60) and ‘silvertip’ ($60-300+). There are also synthetic brushes ($20-60) available for vegans ($1).
Boar brushes are stiff; pure badger are soft; best badger is stiffer than pure, but holds more water; silvertip is the softest, and holds a metric tonne of water. I don’t know much about synthetic brushes, but apparently they’re ‘pretty good’ (whatever that means), so you don’t have to feel like you’re getting a poor experience if you conscientiously object to a rodent being killed for its coat.
I started with a $13 Omega boar-hair brush, found at Shopper’s Drug Mart. It was good enough to really get me into this whole classic shaving thing. I eventually upgraded to a mid-range ($160) Muhle silvertip brush. It was a lot nicer, but it didn’t seem worth the huge premium. I bought it because I felt I was invested enough into this method, and didn’t want to buy anything else for another twenty years or so. After getting used to it though, the old boar brush was unusable: it felt like I was pushing a stiff old paintbrush around on my face.

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I recently bought an Edwin Jagger best badger travel brush, and after getting used to the silvertip, the difference was huge. It was prickly, scratchy, and took a long time to make a good lather.
Something else it reminded me of, new badger brushes stink. The silvertip took some time to lose the scent. I used the strongest menthol soaps I had until the brush no longer had its distinctive musk. This travel brush will take some time. Apparently you can use shampoo, conditioner, or Borax to get rid of the smell if you absolutely cannot tolerate it.
Ultimately the point of the brush is to generate a lather with shaving soap or cream, but secondarily it stimulates your follicles, helping lift the hair away from your skin before you actually go to shave. It probably helps also clear away any dirt and oil. The larger the brush (the more bristles), the more effective and faster it will be at each of these tasks.
All that said, I don’t think it really matters what brush you start with. If you’re just experimenting, the cheapest brushes are good enough. If you’re going to stick with the whole regimen however, you’ll eventually want to upgrade. The trick is avoiding ‘acquisition disorder’ and just buying one good brush if you have some idea of what you want. There are fanatics online with a dozen or more brushes (a very informative video on this subject). So I suggest that you start with a boar brush, but skip straight to silvertip if you can afford it, if you decide to stick with making your own lather while shaving.
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