very informative phil , i remember Hamilton brushes and tools from my apprenticeship they were good brushes , and made good scrapers and filling knives dusters that lasted years and years . then they cut the length of the bristles down so i avoided them and company's i worked for also done that , my preference was purdy before i retired
Hi Phil, I bought a set of Cleanedge back in September for use with oil based Dulux weathershield undercoat and gloss, I really liked them and I have used them with water based paints ,which I found to be very good also ,and they wash out from oil based very easily!.
Phil, I’ve struggled with these on mouldings and intricate areas, the brush is too thick and the length out being short doesn’t help. Thing about the old Hammies was that you ended up with a nice taper to the tip after you’d worn them in. That’s missing on the Clean Edge and I find it drags paint off in corners. Great for flat surfaces and skirtings though.
I don't fall for the BS from the big companies, the notion you need a different brush for each job or paint. It's all marketing and sales rubbish. I bought several brushes from one company and had them in all WB paints under the sun and they lasted a good 5 years before needing replacing. So it can be done by these companies to produce 2-3 great all-rounder brushes for all modern-day WB paints. All this guy is doing is confusing everyone by playing along with the big companies marketing strategies which is only about shifting mediocre products off the shelves. Who cares which company invited Phil to their factory? If there is no authenticity or honestly, what does it benefit any of us if he gets his ego easily massaged for an hour ?
Pure for oil, synthetic for everything else? That's what i got taught... To be honest can't tell much difference between a £6 set from Jackson and spear and a £40 2 inch from purdy/ Wooster. Only Hamilton i ever buy are pure 😞 ... But i am only a brush hand as me father says 🤪
@@ProfessionalPainterDecorator i`m dutch,we almost dont use these flat brushes. we use round or oval brushes and for painting waterbased paint on paneldoors i use the rollers for waterbased paint much better results as whith the brush but what i wanted to say is that we have brushes you can use for waterbased and oil based,so in 1 brush they are from brands like STAALMEESTER or ANZA
very informative phil , i remember Hamilton brushes and tools from my apprenticeship they were good brushes , and made good scrapers and filling knives dusters that lasted years and years . then they cut the length of the bristles down so i avoided them and company's i worked for also done that , my preference was purdy before i retired
Hi Phil,
I bought a set of Cleanedge back in September for use with oil based Dulux weathershield undercoat and gloss, I really liked them and I have used them with water based paints ,which I found to be very good also ,and they wash out from oil based very easily!.
Thanks for sharing
Top review mate, will definitely be checking both out on next Dorris i do.
Please do!
Nice to see you getting work from Shakin' Stevens 👍
More to come!
Just read the title, do you have a guest coming on? Ooooooh!😅
Tomorrow at 5
Phil, I’ve struggled with these on mouldings and intricate areas, the brush is too thick and the length out being short doesn’t help. Thing about the old Hammies was that you ended up with a nice taper to the tip after you’d worn them in. That’s missing on the Clean Edge and I find it drags paint off in corners. Great for flat surfaces and skirtings though.
You agree with my findings then?
@ yes Phil, spot on imo.
Where did you get the baseball cap from?
which one?
Got more hair on his arms. Door man.😅
I don't fall for the BS from the big companies, the notion you need a different brush for each job or paint. It's all marketing and sales rubbish.
I bought several brushes from one company and had them in all WB paints under the sun and they lasted a good 5 years before needing replacing. So it can be done by these companies to produce 2-3 great all-rounder brushes for all modern-day WB paints.
All this guy is doing is confusing everyone by playing along with the big companies marketing strategies which is only about shifting mediocre products off the shelves.
Who cares which company invited Phil to their factory? If there is no authenticity or honestly, what does it benefit any of us if he gets his ego easily massaged for an hour ?
You made brushes last 5 years, gees you’ve can’t being using them every day then🤣. What brushes are you using?
How have you found these two Hamiltons then, when you tried them?
What brand was that?
Pure for oil, synthetic for everything else? That's what i got taught... To be honest can't tell much difference between a £6 set from Jackson and spear and a £40 2 inch from purdy/ Wooster. Only Hamilton i ever buy are pure 😞 ... But i am only a brush hand as me father says 🤪
gotta move with the times like Hamilton.. they don't do Pure bristle anymore....... so that should be your answer... or question.
@@ProfessionalPainterDecorator i`m dutch,we almost dont use these flat brushes.
we use round or oval brushes
and for painting waterbased paint on paneldoors i use the rollers for waterbased paint
much better results as whith the brush
but what i wanted to say is that we have brushes you can use for waterbased and oil based,so in 1 brush
they are from brands like STAALMEESTER or ANZA
@@aardbei07 Hi, thanks for watching and commenting. :)
Where’s the expert ?
You like trolling don’t you.
Where’s the tedious troll?
@@Liverpool1ne every comment he leaves. Loser.
@@t.dizzle83 crank yer neck back in just asking a question
@@Liverpool1ne just replying to him now