I tried making medieval paintbrushes

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  • Опубліковано 2 жов 2024
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 436

  • @MorganDonner
    @MorganDonner  Рік тому +24

    👒🔍 Download June’s Journey for free now using my link: woo.ga/m3b0do

    • @fantasydesigns4104
      @fantasydesigns4104 Рік тому +2

      one reason that the paint may not apply is that you have to have the paper slanted at an angle to write/paint like they did in medevial times, so put it on a slanted painting desk or writing desk then try it.

    • @emeraldqueen1994
      @emeraldqueen1994 Рік тому +2

      I heard that modern brush bristles are coated in starch, corn starch in particular i believe, to make them stick together… try that!

    • @fionafiona1146
      @fionafiona1146 Рік тому

      Your local natural history museum or (kill-)shelter might get regular supplies of roadkill for further experiments.
      My local natural history museum employees taxidermists to add recently deceased animals in the style of the existing research collection and do maintenance on the collection but they get much more than they use (measuring all, preparating only the most intact specimens)

  • @delanocarson7544
    @delanocarson7544 Рік тому +638

    I wonder if the beaver fur struggled because beaver fur is kind of hydrophobic? Since they're around water all the time I'd imagine they have kind of a different fur type than say a squirrel.

    • @quicksilvertears921
      @quicksilvertears921 Рік тому +134

      And since the author had such strong feelings about which fur was best, we know that the type of fur matters. So cool to watch and think about.

    • @MorganDonner
      @MorganDonner  Рік тому +222

      Oh 100%, I agree that totally makes sense. It was a lot of fun to play around with what I had on hand, although I'd love to know how the miniver brush would compare.

    • @mattl3729
      @mattl3729 Рік тому +49

      I would think that would mostly be due to the oils the beaver's skin exudes, so from a processed pelt, that wouldn't be a factor- but I could be wrong. Certainly the size, flexibility and surface texture would all play some role. I know Japanese brushes are made with multiple types of hair- to take advantage of different factors.

    • @spoplehughes
      @spoplehughes Рік тому +60

      I believe it is a tradition in Japan that a babies first hair cut they use the hair to make a writing brush that you take through life with you

    • @peachxtaehyung
      @peachxtaehyung Рік тому +8

      ​@@spoplehughesthat sort of cool idea! I dont know how well it would last but yeah

  • @amaeve1950
    @amaeve1950 Рік тому +244

    "I am going to do the red first, because I am obnoxious" 😂
    You're not obnoxious. You are consistent and on brand 😊

  • @bessbird
    @bessbird Рік тому +268

    Modern-day natural material brushes are often made from Sable. Utility brushes are sometimes made from horsehair. I’d suggest using cat hair, but…

    • @raeperonneau4941
      @raeperonneau4941 Рік тому +13

      😂

    • @yamitsukikarasu8857
      @yamitsukikarasu8857 Рік тому +14

      Sable is the best for water based paints like gouach because of their water retention.

    • @Just1Nora
      @Just1Nora Рік тому +7

      I legit had no idea what kind of animal a sable was, and I'm a flippin artist! 😂 Granted my media of choice are photography and jewelry, so not too much painting going on, aside from coating metal in flux before soldering it, and those are just the cheapest of cheap animal hair brushes, usually horsehair, because if you use synthetic ones and have to reapply flux once the metal is hot the synthetic fiber will melt. Been there, done that... 😬
      Genuine Sable brushes are supposed to be very good for watercolors with a good water absorption level and springy responsiveness. (I used to adore art supply catalogs and reading the descriptions of all of the different products, from brushes to kilns and everything in between) I knew sable was the name of a color and thought the brushes were called that because of the bristle color...I was half right. 😂 I think they use ermine these days because they are easy to farm and similar to sables. I've seen everything from hog hair (large wash brushes), to rabbit, horsehair, squirrel, weasel/stoat/ermine, to even a few exotics. Iirc, I think fine detail brushes are made from squirrel or a blend of squirrel and hare. Don't quote me on that though I could be totally wrong. 😅

    • @Just1Nora
      @Just1Nora Рік тому +14

      I mean, I did just do the seasonal Furminator groom on 3 of 4 cats, so I've got handfuls of the stuff...😂 Our female cat has lots of rough guard hairs while my oldest has a dense plush coat like thick rabbit fur, and my youngest has a very smooth, sleek, thin coat (he's the one that doesn't need Furminating). I could make a brush apiece and compare them...hmm...

    • @musicandbooklover-p2o
      @musicandbooklover-p2o Рік тому +5

      Badger is another one, often used in cosmetic brushes.

  • @maudline
    @maudline Рік тому +256

    And this is why speciality brushes are so darn expensive! To lay all the hairs to avoid the ‘seperating’ and ‘twisting’ you showed is quite the skill
    Thanks for trying it out 🎨🖌️

  • @JFLATTERMANN
    @JFLATTERMANN Рік тому +171

    Hi Morgan, you might want to prepare your brushes first by removing any natural oils. Soap usually helps. That’s why your hair one works nice because you remove the oils when washing your hair.

    • @MorganDonner
      @MorganDonner  Рік тому +47

      Definitely worth a shot!

    • @paularunyan8588
      @paularunyan8588 Рік тому +4

      There are zero oils left on the fur hairs. The tanning process strips all that away.

    • @barkingpawz
      @barkingpawz 11 місяців тому

      @@MorganDonner❤

  • @KelseyDrummer
    @KelseyDrummer Рік тому +452

    Morgan never hesisting to cut her hair is honestly inspiring.

    • @dees3179
      @dees3179 Рік тому +5

      Morgan is so lucky with such thick hair, I have serious envy. That little bit she cut is about the sum total of my whole hair as it’s decided to fall out again. Sucks. Her confidence with her hair is a lovely thing to see.

    • @ilonaniinemae4735
      @ilonaniinemae4735 Рік тому +1

      @@dees3179 Have you seen a specialist to know why your hair is falling out?

    • @Skeazix
      @Skeazix Рік тому +2

      I bet Morgan was the kid who cut her own bangs when she was three.

    • @dees3179
      @dees3179 Рік тому

      @@ilonaniinemae4735 endless saga. In short, I live in England, so access to specialists is difficult, Im broke so can't do it privately. , my body hates me, Ive previously had delightful things like chemo, and at least three of the medications I'm currently on list alopecia as a 'rare' side effect.. .... the medical response is basically well, would you rather be dead?
      Problem is, mental health department doesn't see it that way.
      So in summary, it pretty clear why, and unfortunately no. But thanks for your interest! I just want Morgan's pretty hair😭

  • @bridgetgroce4634
    @bridgetgroce4634 Рік тому +147

    I love Clara the Cat! She just wants to help you ❤️

    • @MorganDonner
      @MorganDonner  Рік тому +66

      She is gloriously helpful, for my mood if nothing else ❤️

    • @Just1Nora
      @Just1Nora Рік тому +3

      Cats out here like, "Look Mom! I'm helping!" 😂 My boys are always up in any new business.

  • @Jaeler9
    @Jaeler9 Рік тому +19

    Ruth Goodman did a very nice demonstration of brush construction in Secrets of the Castle if I remember correctly. There’s an entire episode on castle decor, pigments, dyes, brushes, tiles, soft furnishings, etc. If anyone wants that additional information.

  • @creativitybytrisha6819
    @creativitybytrisha6819 Рік тому +70

    Gouache cracking when dried is common. Typically you will add water to the gouache and let it sit for a bit so the paint can moisten more before you load the brush.

    • @becauseimafan
      @becauseimafan Рік тому +6

      Oh so it really did get better as the experiment went along! Neat! 😄

    • @detty9256
      @detty9256 Рік тому +3

      Same with water colour, it's just when it dries it shrinks a bit so it cracks, think of it like mud turning back into sand in the desert :)

  • @roxiepoe9586
    @roxiepoe9586 Рік тому +111

    My most brush obsessed friend insists (Read "insist" as "lengthy sermons while standing on a fruit crate".) that the best brushes are made from the hair at the end of the tail of an animal. (This guy never passed a roadkilled critter whose tail he did not clip - this includes skunk. Yes. skunk.) He says that these brushes hold more ink and trail more smoothly. As his work is superior, it could be that the quality of his brushes is a factor. (He also says that using hair that has been cut on the end that is used against the working surface should be avoided as it does not draw ink properly.) But, one should allow that he is obsessed.

    • @thebookwyrmslair6757
      @thebookwyrmslair6757 Рік тому +11

      Your friend sounds absolutely fascinating!! Thank you for sharing their opinion! 😊

    • @thebookwyrmslair6757
      @thebookwyrmslair6757 Рік тому +8

      Also, a farmer friend of mine told me once that if you can kill a skunk WITHOUT it shooting musk first, something in the musk mixture is actually extremely valuable to perfume-makers. The stuff helps perfumes stick better to skin... without the awful odor they use. 😂

    • @lenabreijer1311
      @lenabreijer1311 Рік тому +8

      My art teacher was very particular about which brush to use for which paint and the kind of result needed. I admit the high price brushes did make a difference and they were made of some kind of fur or hair.

    • @michellebyrom6551
      @michellebyrom6551 Рік тому +10

      Course Hog hair for oils, squirrel and sable for watercolours. Different shapes and lengths produce different brush strokes, not just thicker-thinner lines. Egg tempera - egg yolk plus pigment - needs very fine brushes to lay down lines of paint in one direction and then 90° crosswise in the next layer, after the first one dries. That has to be repeated until the desired result is obtained. That was used before oil paints. Looking at the continued brilliance of many 800 year old paintings, it's worth the time and effort on major works.

    • @daxxydog5777
      @daxxydog5777 Рік тому +2

      That’s a brave dude! I drove over a freshly deceased skunk on the way to work one morning with my heater vents going and three days later and half a bottle of Febreeze later, I managed to get in my car without gagging.

  • @gothicanimeangel96
    @gothicanimeangel96 Рік тому +72

    Just from experience of using commercial gouache and watercolor tube paints, I think the paint cracking as it dries is not too uncommon, and has more to do with the water content and the speed it dries, as well as the pigments themselves. Different mineral pigments do often behave differently as you paint with them, also.

    • @musicandbooklover-p2o
      @musicandbooklover-p2o Рік тому +3

      Egg white is a traditional mixer for the ground pigments and is what is used when painting icons, mainly because they are painted as were painted a 1000+ years ago and egg white was the binder for the crushed minerals in those times. Fascinating to see them paint an icon from beginning to end, and they begin by actually crushing the minerals themselves then mixing them with the egg white and applying them.

  • @EvilRubberDuckie
    @EvilRubberDuckie Рік тому +23

    I knew the squirrel hair bit about making excellent brushes, high end car companies use them for pin striping

    • @kathrynredmond5294
      @kathrynredmond5294 Рік тому +3

      And the brushes used to pick up gilding sheets! Specifically their tail fur!

  • @shawnaclair1151
    @shawnaclair1151 Рік тому +17

    The scratchieness of the beaver hair brush reminds me of dry brushing with a hogs hair paintbrush. Hogs hair brushes are very usefull. So maybe that brush just needs to be used for different uses. 😊 Really enjoyed your adventures in brush and paint making.

  • @kiragarvie
    @kiragarvie Рік тому +81

    I remember in first and second grade, my friends and I used to make little paint brushes with pine needles, and we would find little brown and red and white soft rocks, crush them, and make paint with a bit of water! Sometimes, if the rocks were really soft, you could just use them like a crayon. There was a lot of natural slate around our school, so we used little slate slabs as canvases 🤣 We could draw on each other with our rock paints, too! I had forgotten about that memory!

    • @indiabilly
      @indiabilly Рік тому +1

      That’s very cool, either a teacher inspired you by telling you about cave paintings or you discovered ancient art supplies by yourselves xx

    • @patriciag3899
      @patriciag3899 11 місяців тому

      I was the ringleader of rock "paint" at my school playground, until we got in trouble because crushing rocks was "dangerous." I still remember it fondly though! 😅

  • @andoliniknits
    @andoliniknits Рік тому +79

    Didn't know that "making a medieval paintbrush out of human hair" is what I'd be watching tonight, but I'm so here for it!!

  • @abbydunavan3220
    @abbydunavan3220 Рік тому +85

    Isn't life with cats interesting? We got two new kittens last week. It's like having toddlers that climb. Thank you for telling us your kitty's name! Is she named for anyone like your doggos?

    • @MorganDonner
      @MorganDonner  Рік тому +44

      Slightly for Clara Oswald of Doctor Who, but mostly we just liked it 😁

    • @stephgreen3070
      @stephgreen3070 Рік тому +9

      Toddlers definitely climb lol. Or, at least mine surely did!

    • @Just1Nora
      @Just1Nora Рік тому +2

      Razor toed drunk ninjas. That's kittens, and good luck with the new masters! They'll learn their roles soon enough. 😂 I have a taskmaster, an emotional and anxiety support, a migraine alert and pur therapist, and our one female, the self appointed clown and mood booster. Ever seen a cat wear your shoes? She slid one front leg into each slide and laid down with her legs in my shoes and just stayed there and looked at me. I don't care how grumpy or pain cranky you are, that's delightful and has to bring a smile to your face.

    • @aliciafarnham5616
      @aliciafarnham5616 Рік тому +2

      When my cat was a kitten, she'd find a shopping bag or a bra, slip the handle/strap around her neck and race around the house with the bag/bra streaming out along her back like a cape, making turbocat mrrrrrrr's. Most hilarious thing ever.

  • @Chibihugs
    @Chibihugs Рік тому +66

    Hurray for the exploratory fun of art, crafting and science used in the making of these brushes. 😊

    • @MorganDonner
      @MorganDonner  Рік тому +14

      The exploring part is absolutely my favorite part of art and craft!

  • @Sonata-in-E-Major
    @Sonata-in-E-Major Рік тому +69

    I swear, this is the best day ever. ShannonMakes, Maren Sievert, Morgan Donner, AND a scheduled Rachel Maksy video ALL IN ONE DAY!??? I am THRILLED!!!

    • @thebookwyrmslair6757
      @thebookwyrmslair6757 Рік тому +11

      AND Charlie from The Stitchery's latest shenanigans!! ❤❤❤ I'm enjoying a binge-fest while I clean up my sewing area and complete a few quick projects. 😊

    • @Sonata-in-E-Major
      @Sonata-in-E-Major Рік тому

      @@thebookwyrmslair6757 Ooh, sounds like a new channel to check out! Thanks for the suggestion!

    • @diannemh2250
      @diannemh2250 Рік тому +5

      Even better because the AFL ( Australian Rules Football) Grand Final is on today - which I have zero interest in, unlike my H! Now I have an awesome bunch of new vids to watch & help me tune out the footy, whilst doing some sewing today

    • @illya7
      @illya7 Рік тому +5

      Are we the same person? I will be watching all of these with a nice cup of tea and some Bahlsen chocolate mint biscuits

    • @hungrylikealoup
      @hungrylikealoup Рік тому +3

      Also, Kaz Rowe!

  • @TheGFeather
    @TheGFeather Рік тому +11

    "Wild rocks"
    I understand precisely what you mean, but it made me grin all the same😄

  • @cutedarkarts
    @cutedarkarts Рік тому +19

    Morgan trying to make watercolor paint and paintbrush’s, and then getting very confused/concerned about how they’re working is a mood. Also, for keeping the hairs from falling out, you probably want to blunt the end of the brush inside the ferrule and add a thin layer of glue on them before putting the brush together. Also watercolors need a LOT of water when activating them and a very saturated brush to hold the colors

  • @TheGabygael
    @TheGabygael Рік тому +21

    my wierd mind : *pictures wild lapis lazuli frolicking in a meadow*
    i've always been obsessed with both lapis lazuli and ultramarine blue, now i know why

    • @boggie2of5
      @boggie2of5 Рік тому +2

      Same!! Happy bouncy blue rocks 😂 like the trolls in frozen 😊

  • @JHaven-lg7lj
    @JHaven-lg7lj 11 місяців тому

    Of all the cool and amazing things you did in this video, wearing a fine white shirt around wet paint is the most amazing to me.
    I can’t walk past a closed paint can without somehow getting it on me…

  • @stvsmbb
    @stvsmbb Рік тому +29

    omg this is bringing me back to fourth grade, when my friends and i ripped the eraser out of a pencil, cut off a bit of my hair, pressed it into the back of the pencil with the now-empty metal eraser shell, and dubbed it the Hair Brush. then we went around weirding everybody else out with it lmao

  • @juliehenry5353
    @juliehenry5353 Рік тому +9

    Your 2nd fur was mink - the first looked like rabbit -😊

  • @ateisate7270
    @ateisate7270 Рік тому

    My uncle used to do a booth at a renfairtype festival in my hometown about paints. Obviously no lead white. They used a chalk. And for a bunch of colors they used blueberries/bilberries which was so much fun. Because it changes color depending on what you mix it with. Some colors were so hard because they used cheap materials because well, they weren't making money and didn't want to actively loose money. I remember green being hard as well as light blue because the blue berrycolor mixed with the white chalk made a light purple-ish color.

  • @sashasparroww
    @sashasparroww Рік тому +15

    using more honey would probably have stopped the cracking, but it would have kept your paints from drying too. oxides (in my experience) tend to be drier pigments and my professional paints crack a bit too.

  • @marymugge1523
    @marymugge1523 Рік тому +2

    I appreciate you doing all this experimenting, because I've wanted to know but I'm too lazy to do it myself. Plus my kids would not be able to resist trying to use my brush on everything in the house.

  • @paperyakuk
    @paperyakuk Рік тому +26

    I recently went to Provence in France and visited the ochre valley in Roussillon and it was remarkable and so vivid! If anyone visits that part of France I’d really recommend it for seeing ochre pigments in the wild!

    • @thebookwyrmslair6757
      @thebookwyrmslair6757 Рік тому +4

      There's an area outside of Calhan, CO, called the Paint Mines. Lots of local tribes did, and still do, use the area to get LOTS of different color pigment rocks with which to decorate their goods. It was an incredible visit!

    • @paperyakuk
      @paperyakuk Рік тому

      @@thebookwyrmslair6757wow that sounds amazing! I’ll have to look it up!

    • @becauseimafan
      @becauseimafan Рік тому +2

      ​@@thebookwyrmslair6757 Wow! Both of these sound like amazing places to see!! 🤯🤩🎨

    • @thebookwyrmslair6757
      @thebookwyrmslair6757 Рік тому +1

      @becauseimafan I'd lived in Colorado Springs - the city closest to Calhan - for almost a decade before I heard of it! It's a hidden jewel.

  • @anieth
    @anieth Рік тому +23

    I always appreciate you wide interest in history and how you show how to make pewter, a bed, shoes and now paint! Very fun!

  • @nautil_us
    @nautil_us Рік тому

    Clara is so cute! And i love how the paints turned out!

  • @daughterofbastet
    @daughterofbastet Рік тому

    Yaaay, Cennino Cennini! Love that book. It sucked me into the world of egg tempera and gesso painting.

  • @animosity9197
    @animosity9197 Рік тому +6

    Making your own brushes out of your hair (or someone else's hair) is still the recommended way to get really REALLY fine lines, so I'm not surprised your hair performed well! Wild that it went well even though your hair is curly; I would have assumed that would pose more problems, but it looked like you just kind of got used to the "handed-ness" (curl direction?) of your brush!

  • @celticgoddess81
    @celticgoddess81 Рік тому

    I think we know who stole the show! Miss Clara has got to be the best assistant I've seen in ages.

  • @saraa3418
    @saraa3418 Рік тому +16

    Depending on what effect's you're looking to create, I've seen brushes made from the tips of feathers for fine work. Human hair works well, if you've got a long haired cat or dog that would be fine too. I'd imagine that more stiff hair would be good for stencil brushes...

    • @leemasters3592
      @leemasters3592 Рік тому +2

      I attended the Yidaki: Didgeridoo and the Sound of Australia exhibition in 2016. One of the artists painting in traditional style used reeds and sticks, sometimes gently chewed on as brushes, For fine lines a few hairs from the dogs tail tied to a stick with a bit of human hair were used.

  • @WanderTrust
    @WanderTrust Рік тому

    omg check out beam paints! She's a canadian paintmaker and shes also developed an exterior house paint! She collects a lot of the pigments locally and uses reclaimed birch disks for palettes

  • @sophiephilips-roberts3311
    @sophiephilips-roberts3311 Рік тому +6

    I really recommend the book Color by Victoria Finlay, for more about the history of different pigments! I had to read it in school and it was a really fun read!

    • @nancyreid8729
      @nancyreid8729 Рік тому +1

      I second that; I’m a fiber and yarn dyer, and I find the book very valuable.

  • @molnotmole3428
    @molnotmole3428 Рік тому +6

    Modern gauche takes a lot to master so I think you did a relatively good job. Also, I need to cut 4-6inches off my hair and I was thinking about things I could do with it!

  • @fshbulb1
    @fshbulb1 Рік тому +7

    Flashbacks to the hair cutting video

  • @tracycastleberry7299
    @tracycastleberry7299 Рік тому +8

    Clara ❤
    I’ll post my Rose Tyler on pet central.
    Love the paint and brush experimentation!! ❤

  • @TheGabygael
    @TheGabygael Рік тому +5

    i literally thought "oh no, put an apron on you risk puttin some paint on your dress" *proceeds to mix red paint with a red dress on*

  • @GymGirl88
    @GymGirl88 Рік тому +1

    I think the brushes needed a trim to cover areas better rather than just fine lining

  • @shirleyporter9025
    @shirleyporter9025 Рік тому +4

    First fur looks like Musquash and the other one is Mink.

  • @fitandhappy42
    @fitandhappy42 Рік тому +12

    If you’ve not played it I can’t suggest highly enough the game Pentiment, I really think you’d get a kick out of it. It’s all set in medieval Germany about a journeyman artist, and designed to look like an old illuminated manuscript. Lost of lovely details about monastic art and peasant life. Also it’s a murder mystery so it’s fun too. x

    • @fitandhappy42
      @fitandhappy42 Рік тому +1

      Also 10/10 cat naming, from the mum of another Clara. 😊

    • @becauseimafan
      @becauseimafan Рік тому +1

      Ooh cool! I'm adding it to my list to check it out, thank you!

    • @raraavis7782
      @raraavis7782 Рік тому +1

      Oh, thanks. I will check that out for sure!

  • @AngelicDirt
    @AngelicDirt Рік тому +5

    Neat. A decidedly different book I found suggested large twigs and twine or fiber for various materials for a brush. Then again, they also suggested oak gall and acorn shells(?) for ink/pigment (they, um.. they apparently have a 'scent' to them as they boil, suggest ventilation, and seem to take a forever to extract... XD ). Not unreasonable, considering, but try at your own peril, I guess... :v
    The mystery/possible-beaver fur brush, after being cut, seems rad. Nice scratchy, scrawbly marks. Very expressive. :3

    • @marabuora9547
      @marabuora9547 Рік тому +2

      My mother tried the gall ink thing, can confirm it works great! Can also confirm that the boiling process stinks like something up and died😅 I really love that ink though, because compared to inks I bought it's much lighter, it's the only one that won't go all the way through modern paper!

  • @madebylora
    @madebylora Рік тому +9

    Really interesting! Gives much more appreciation for their painting skills when using such brushes! The “scratchy” effect would be great if you’re painting animals and want to paint fur texture. Also I think gouache cracking when it dries is quite normal. The only gouche I’ve used is white (to add some opaque highlights on a watercolour). I squeezed some from the tube into a little tin, so it was more portable, and that cracked too when it dried. Oh, and I’m glad your hair sacrifice turned out to be a good brush, despite the curl.

    • @thebookwyrmslair6757
      @thebookwyrmslair6757 Рік тому +6

      I think the curl might work to her advantage in certain situations? Kind of like a stub nib fountain pen - which helps me write better calligraphy. 🤷🏻‍♀️

  • @nekkidnora
    @nekkidnora 11 місяців тому

    Oh man, I got a sphynx kitten recently and he's so much trouble. Love Clara.

  • @lightdark00
    @lightdark00 Рік тому +5

    Those wild rocks are so hard to tame. You can leave food out for them. Sit and try to have a picnic with them. You can even pet them. Never do they get domesticated though 😕

    • @becauseimafan
      @becauseimafan Рік тому

      😂😂 OMG, I just watched a Strange Aeons video about Tumblr Clown Husbandry so I was already in a headspace of "tumblr takes a joke and runs with it" - making up histories of different species of clown, and guides for taking care of your pet clown, people asking for advice on feeding and _proper enrichment!_ 😂 - So your comment about rocks IS ABSOLUTELY SENDING ME!!!!!!
      Thank you so much! You're awesome and I hope you know it, internet person! 😁

  • @ntcssj
    @ntcssj Рік тому +3

    I cut my own hair typically once or twice a year and often tie a chunk before cutting it and have definitely thought how my hair feels like it would make for a good make-up brush, so this is a great video to watch!
    I've never committed to crafting with my hair so it's all just ended up in the garden as mulchy compost. :)

  • @zalphinian
    @zalphinian Рік тому +4

    I use the modern brushes, and it's still a good idea to clean them then reshape them using brush soap and conditioner. Even watching modern brushes get made they still add a conditioning kind of agent to help it maintain shape. I wish I could remember what it was!

  • @vera8656
    @vera8656 Рік тому +5

    I just love your personality, my goodness! Obviously I'm very interested in your historic DIY and sewing content, but what makes me come back to EVERY video is your personality. I can't even describe it, but my neuro-divergent brain feels the wholesomeness and gets soothed by your attitude and calming voice. If I'm struggling with over-stimulation or other issues that come up for me, your videos help me to quiet my brain down (no idea if that makes sense to anyone but me :D ) Just genuinely happy and grateful that you are sharing your skills, interests and personality with us.

  • @bridgetlangeveld2619
    @bridgetlangeveld2619 Рік тому +1

    have you ever tried making a brush where the bristles are made of feather as well? because i did that once and it was perfect for fine lines

  • @HarmonyinTime37751
    @HarmonyinTime37751 Рік тому +7

    Wonderful. You have pribably noticed Lady Clara Cat will nibble the brush made of your hair too, they are so tactile. All of the samples looked pretty good to me

  • @hypnotherapy69
    @hypnotherapy69 Рік тому +6

    This brought back so many memmories from childhood, my dad is a profesional artist and we did this a few times in the summer growing up.

  • @amandaallen9364
    @amandaallen9364 Рік тому +3

    The very best part of this video is that you don’t spend any time at the beginning justifying why you want to do this. Of course you want to. And of course we want to watch. Fantastic and informative as always.

  • @theoriginalmilji
    @theoriginalmilji Рік тому

    I don’t know if it’s historical accurate but do you think maybe if you had dipped the ends of the tide up hair in wax first, dried and then put it in the quill thing, it might have kept the hair together better? Less fall out and water proof. I loved this video!

  • @isabelledionne8396
    @isabelledionne8396 Рік тому +2

    Fun video! A word of advise though : when working with powdered pigments, you should wear a mask because it can get into your lungs

  • @Zoomeia
    @Zoomeia Рік тому +4

    I LIVE for Clara the Naked Menace!

    • @becauseimafan
      @becauseimafan Рік тому

      _New catchphrase!!_ I love this! I would get a mug with something about this on it 😂

  • @lorrainemunoa791
    @lorrainemunoa791 Рік тому +4

    This is so cool to see done!! The ratio of bristle length to stiffness has a lot of effect on how it handles paint at varying viscosities, I can confirm, being trained for working in watercolor, acrylic and oil paints. The thicker your paint, or more gummy/sticky, the stiffer your bristles may need to be. Longer bristles are better for thin lines, once the stiffness is accounted for, and I do think mink and beaver may be a little hydrophobic still, which might also factor in. Squirrel fur might be available through any game processor in your neck of the woods... Oil paints are to this day made more or less the same way you made yours- with oil, maybe a little gum arabic, and fancy dirt!

  • @ManeLastful
    @ManeLastful Рік тому +2

    I think you would really like Michel Pastoureau's books about color. He's a historian and specialise in symbolic systems like heraldry, sigillography and my personal favorite: colors. He published several books, each one about one specific color (blue, black, green, red, yellow and white) and talks about the history of the pigments in painting and fabric dyes in europe. It's very well writen and fascinating!

  • @harpress
    @harpress Рік тому +2

    Great video as usual!
    On the opacity: I have been to a calligraphy + gouache pain miniature workshop and it was absolutely normal to use layers to build up opacity, letting it dry in between layers :)

  • @DavidCollinsRivera
    @DavidCollinsRivera Рік тому +2

    I'd normally say, "Maybe try cat hair, too." Except, in this case, well...

  • @laurenschiller1804
    @laurenschiller1804 Рік тому +3

    Wow, porphyry is super swank and hard to come by if you're not in Italy, though part of the reason it was expensive was that due to it being extremely hard and hard to work with, so a random smallish slab that you looted from a Roman villa can just sit there looking fancy. But even in Italy in the 1400s having porphyry in your floors was a sign that you had a lot of money to spend on decoration.
    eta: Oh, Cennini's from Florence, that tracks

  • @thebookwyrmslair6757
    @thebookwyrmslair6757 Рік тому +6

    I just know this comment section is going to be GOLD!!! THANK YOU, Morgan, for coming up with such a creative idea and making such an awesome community!

  • @mattl3729
    @mattl3729 Рік тому +14

    Very neat- make me want to make my own brushes now LOL
    For proper science though, you can't test multiple variables at once- you need to stick to one each time. Like using your experimental brushes with commercial paint first; that tells you how the brushes perform- and commercial brushes with your paint to see how the paint performs; THEN for fun, see how your two self-made things do together. You're right to repeat though since absolutely you'll improve over time and get the various 'feels' for things.

    • @raraavis7782
      @raraavis7782 Рік тому

      That made me slightly frustrated as well 😅
      Not that I'm planning on making either brushes or paint myself, so it doesn't really matter, but I was genuinely curious about the result!

  • @thebookwyrmslair6757
    @thebookwyrmslair6757 Рік тому +3

    THANK YOU for switching to voiceover after the initial few glass scratch sounds! It's one of the noises that makes my skin crawl the most. 🤪

  • @barbarahouk1983
    @barbarahouk1983 Рік тому

    Interesting as usual.

  • @sewvintagebysunraedoll
    @sewvintagebysunraedoll Рік тому +3

    This was so interesting & fascinating to watch. Every time I cut mine or (my kids) hair, I have often wondered about making paint brushes. You answered all my questions. ❤

  • @jakehgardner
    @jakehgardner Рік тому +1

    This entire process was so satisfying to watch, I would love to try this myself 😊

  • @rinarose9544
    @rinarose9544 Рік тому +3

    If you're into gardening, you can also grow and harvest a ton of period pigments! madder for read, woad for blue (same pigment as indigo but from a different plant), brazilwood, and a ton of others. some flowers even give you pigments too, I think coreopsis, marigold, and others too!

    • @peglamphier4745
      @peglamphier4745 Рік тому +1

      You could make fabric dyes with those botanicals too. Which might be more useful for the delightful Morgan's needs. But wouldn't that be fun? A paint and dye garden.

    • @rinarose9544
      @rinarose9544 Рік тому

      @@peglamphier4745 I have plans to do exactly that! I mostly spin and dye yarn/hand knitted things, and I've been wanting to expand my garden as such for years now lmao. Just waiting til I have more space :)

  • @kris_crafter
    @kris_crafter Рік тому +2

    I believe it was ancient scholars in Japan who used the end of their long braided hair (or queue) for calligraphy.
    Also red barn paint was made from rust and casein, a milk by product.

  • @seanaepley3180
    @seanaepley3180 Рік тому +3

    I would try conditioning the bristles! They make brush cleaner/conditioner that works really well for shaping and sticking vristles together!

  • @charischannah
    @charischannah Рік тому +3

    A local (to me in Vancouver BC) artist, Caitlin Ffrench, does a lot of work with natural pigments from plants, dirt, rocks, etc. She'll collect soil samples from different locations and turn them into paints or dyes. Really interesting to see the range of colours she creates just from what most of us would see as brown dirt.

    • @raraavis7782
      @raraavis7782 Рік тому

      Do you know 'Atomic Shrimp'? Sounds like you might enjoy his channel. He recently did similar experiments with clay. Made a number of different little objects, testing different 'foraged' clays and natural addititives, just to see what would happen.

  • @talkingtomyself6728
    @talkingtomyself6728 Рік тому +1

    I love your videos. I feel like I'm going to a class at a SCA event without the Florida heat to drown out my thoughts and learning. So cool.

  • @catrinahorsman1637
    @catrinahorsman1637 Рік тому +2

    I kind of want a video of Bernadette painting with your homemade medieval creations now :-D

  • @SimpleDesertRose
    @SimpleDesertRose Рік тому +2

    Clara: here human let me help
    Morgan: Don't boop my camera
    Clara: *boop*
    Morgan:😒
    Clara: I helps some more
    Morgan: don't
    Clara: *boop*
    Morgan: Clara! That was rude
    Cara: *boop*
    Best part of the whole video. Cats, the struggle is real 😂😂😂

  • @moarmy2122
    @moarmy2122 Рік тому +3

    21:26 funnily enough, the only asmr that I love listening to is paint-making asmr where they make paints and then using those paints they make some sort of art.

  • @gloriaash7511
    @gloriaash7511 Рік тому

    Inc your nails in this video are chefs kiss

  • @shannonburke5286
    @shannonburke5286 Рік тому +2

    Is it a "equal parts by volume" or an "equal parts by weight"? Volume of a fluffy powder seems tricky

  • @TheGabygael
    @TheGabygael Рік тому +2

    also i believe red squirrels are becomin an endangered specie? (or maybe it's grey squirrels)

    • @TheRotrude
      @TheRotrude Рік тому +2

      Red squirrels are endangered, as are black squirrels. Gray squirrels are an invasive species, at least in the Pacific Northwest.

    • @TheGabygael
      @TheGabygael Рік тому +1

      @@TheRotrude i was thinking of british isles but it also being an issue in the us shows how severe the issue is

  • @RealmofRuss
    @RealmofRuss Рік тому +2

    I have a handful of human hair brushes my Dad made for me from my own hair, they're interesting to use.

  • @Accio_Eloise
    @Accio_Eloise Рік тому +2

    Yaaay!!! I love being here first thing ❤❤❤ this channel brings me so much joy.

  • @InThisEssayIWill...
    @InThisEssayIWill... Рік тому +2

    I literally cannot hear the name titanium white without that line from bob Ross in the epic rap battles of history episode Playing in my head. 😂

  • @YasuTaniina
    @YasuTaniina Рік тому +2

    You should look up how kolinsky sabel brushes are made too. Very fascinating. I watched a 45 min documentary on it years ago

  • @pauladavitt7554
    @pauladavitt7554 Рік тому +2

    I love the fact you also have a helpful cat while crafting.

  • @Elin.Noller
    @Elin.Noller Рік тому +1

    Hmmm...."wild" rocks implies that tame/domesticated rocks exist.

  • @RachelBenedetti
    @RachelBenedetti Рік тому +3

    The complete lack of hesitation to take scissors to your hair still leaves me shooketh. But CLARA! OMG, she is so precious.

  • @ayemessdee
    @ayemessdee Рік тому +1

    Yeah the scratchy, won't stick together quality of those first brushes sounds a lot like using modern boar bristle brushes they're just not the right kind of brush for delicate work in water based medium. Maybe that fur was just a tiny bit too coarse, and the human hair worked because (while it didn't naturally have the right shape) it is very soft and flexible. Some of you struggles definitely did sound like issues I've had with using the wrong type of modern brush for the job, or a modern brush that's made with not great quality materials.

  • @sarah-phillips
    @sarah-phillips Рік тому +1

    As a hobby watercolorist, I loved this! I've seen videos of folks making Kolinsky sable brishes and just seeing those and this, you understand why good quality brushes are so expensive.

  • @EveVaneczek
    @EveVaneczek Рік тому +1

    I think part of the problem you were having is that you weren’t using enough water in your paint, the juicier it is the better it will flow. And also with the beaver brushes they might perform better as they are worn in and get roughed up, I believe you can also gently run the dry brush across sandpaper and it will rough up the fur on a microscopic level and make it hold more paint, and thus flow better

  • @monikasturm2575
    @monikasturm2575 Рік тому +1

    Very nice video about an interesting topic. I am a Sumi E artist by trade and have done tons of research on the brushes and how they are made and used. In my trade the floppiness of the brush is actually respected and viewed as the brushes contribution in the composition of the piece. I study art as a hobby and was fascinated with how many medieval paintings have lasted being made out of tempra paint. These days we view it as a subpar medium just meant for elementary school projects, but it apparently has quite the longevity.

  • @shellnet411
    @shellnet411 Рік тому +1

    You didn't search the bristles modern ones they put like a starch to keep the bristles together they put a mold or glue then even your rabbit skin some people restart shit every time they finish with it to keep it fresh. There's also conditioners they use for brushes you can buy.

  • @laurenlaker
    @laurenlaker Рік тому +1

    Could the scratchiness be coming from the trimmed hairs likehow stubble is sharp?

  • @TheSmoothyfreak
    @TheSmoothyfreak Рік тому +1

    furrier here, the first fur you showed is Nutria and the second one is mink.
    Mink is still used to make brushes.

  • @RedCoyote
    @RedCoyote Рік тому +1

    It looks like the furs you had were muskrat and mink. I was once given an old muskrat coat that I used to make some smaller winter stuff like removable cuffs n stuff. It's a very interesting fur texture.

  • @cygnata
    @cygnata Рік тому +1

    Calcium carbon*ate*, carbonite is from star wars ;)

  • @RobinT346
    @RobinT346 Рік тому +1

    the human hair brush looked a lot like what gets called a "rigger" these days. they tend to be long thin brushes which are quite flexible and are used for doing thin line work. so all the properties of the human hair brush! also I'm trying so hard not to info dump about paint pigment and properties and history because it's definitely an ND special interest!

  • @vincnz08
    @vincnz08 11 місяців тому +1

    15:33 I think the green comes from copperoxide

  • @miippi
    @miippi Рік тому +1

    So in order to keep the pigment from drying you need to add a "non-drying oil" like flaxseed oil. Guache is water activated colour, so it dries quite quickly. If you are not using mixing oil that doesn't dry, you'll end up with all the paint on your mixing palette.

    • @miippi
      @miippi Рік тому

      Most modern mixing mediums also contain some sort of oil, so the paint doesn't dry too quickly in the mixing phase, but it doesnt blend in with the water once you reactive the paint.

  • @tiffanytomasino335
    @tiffanytomasino335 Рік тому +1

    This was fun to watch! Is Clara new? I remember your greyhounds but these last few she’s been a lovely sidekick. Thank you for sharing ❤