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How to Clean Your Brushes

(This is the 3rd in our “cleaning series!” Click here to see our post on cleaning your brush tub, and click here to see our post on cleaning your practice head!)

Taking good care of your brushes is absolutely essential if you want to have clean, crisp linework and brushes that last more than one gig!

This is what I do to my brushes at the end of each gig or practice session.  It’s the same method taught to me by my college painting instructor….

First, pump a small amount of liquid hand soap into your palm.

Next, add just a tiny bit of water.

Now, swirl your brushes around in your soapy palm in a circular motion.

Rinse the brushes…it doesn’t hurt to repeat this process either, until your soap and water are clear in your palm. 

It’s always a good general rule when using a brush to avoid getting any paint so far into the bristles that it touches the ferrule.  However, in our industry and the speed with which we work, this can be almost impossible for face painters. 

If you find that you have paint up inside the base of the bristles and the ferrule, after you do one cleaning and rinsing of your brush, add some more soap and water again.  Then, with the brush pointing up, firmly grasp the tip of your brush with your fingertips, and the handle with your other hand.  Work the soap and water down into the base of the bristles and the ferrule by moving the handle in a circular motion, as if you were cranking a fishing reel.

You’ll see the soap work it’s way down into the ferrule, while the spinning motion will scrub the bristles together, loosening paint.  Now, thoroughly rinse the brush to get the paint and soap out of the ferrule.

Once your brushes are clean and rinsed, gently dry them and squeeze excess water out of the bristles with a towel.

(If you really want to get serious about extending the life of your brushes, check out our new assortment of Loew-Cornell brush cleaning jars, pads, and fluid!)

You’re not done yet! 

This next step is really important, and critical for keeping a nice point to your brushes.

Grasp the base of your bristles with your fingertips, right where they come out of the ferrule. Pull the brush back while you squeeze and re-form the bristles into a nice point.

Clean, formed bristles, ready to air dry.

Do the same with your flat brushes, only with these you will press them flat as you pull the brush back.

Now, lay them FLAT to dry. I lay mine on a towel.  Never store them with the bristles pointing up while wet.  This allows the water to seep down into the ferrule, eventually loosening it from the handle and sometimes even rotting the handle.

Better yet, you can even hang them upside down to dry.  This draws the moisture down and out of the bristles.  We actually carry a wonderful little Brush Well made by Loew-Cornell ($6 on Paintertainment.com), which not only stores your brushes safely so that the bristles aren’t touching anything, but the foam that holds the brushes and the string attached also allows you to hang the entire container upside down for drying.

Once they are fully dried, they are safe to put away in your storage container of choice!  Or, if you use the brush well, simply screw on the lid and you’re ready for your next gig!

Got any other cleaning and care methods that you swear by? Please do share with us in the comments!  Thanks for visiting and happy painting!  🙂

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How to Clean Your Practice Head

Does your practice head stain?  Welcome to the club!! I made the mistake of assuming that everyone already knew that ALL practice heads stain, and realized this was a mistake when one of my wonderful customers sent me an email, unhappy with her practice head because it became stained.  So, to correct my mistake, I have designed my own informational sheet about practice head care and cleaning, since the manufacturers have neglected to do so!  You can download it for free, right here! AND, I am doing this post to let everyone know how to take care of your head and what works (for me) to get it cleaned up!

But before we get into cleaning stains, here are a couple ways to help prevent staining in the first place…

Coat your head with hairspray.

It doesn’t matter what brand.  People say the cheapest brands work just as well.  The key here, I hear, is to let the hairspray dry thoroughly between coats, and before starting to paint.  I’m guessing that more coats will equal better protection.  But I would also think that the more water you have in your paint, the less effective hairspray will be.  However, any precaution will probably help!

Okay, so you’ve sprayed it with hairspray and practiced your latest Frozen crown idea with some super stainy blues.  Now it’s time to wash it off and paint it again.  (here you can of course see my years-old stains on the eyes/cheeks…hopefully yours won’t look so bad because you’ve coated it with hairspray, but below you’ll see how I got that off)

Lather it with liquid soap after use.

Try not to leave the paint stay on for days on end if you can help it. After you’ve painted on it, but BEFORE you let any water touch your head to clean it, lather it up with liquid hand soap.  Any kind will do.  I am using Softsoap. For whatever reason, water somehow seems to set the paint on the plastic when rinsed first, so do this to lift the paint off first.

Put some soap on the painted areas and rub it around with your fingers until you’ve lifted off all of the paint.  THEN scrub & rinse it with water.

Removing Stubborn Stains…

My practice head has been stained for years, literally since the first time I used it.  I started out by spraying it with a couple coats of hairspray before use, which many people recommend.  This didn’t seem to help at all with mine but then again I may not have let it dry all the way, and I did not follow the soap-before-water rule.  So, here are some before shots of my head…

My stained head
Here you can see the ghost of a mermaid idea I was working on, stained with Wolfe black.

Over the past few weeks I have been doing a lot of research on this topic, in an effort to give my customers a better answer to their concerns.  You will find this subject discussed all over the internet, on face painting message boards and Facebook groups.  The topic comes up over and over and over again because everyone has this problem! Here are just a few of the things that some artists have said work for their heads:

Eucalyptus oil
Barkeeper’s Friend
Rubbing Alcohol
Magic eraser
olive oil
baby oil
coconut oil
pure acetone nail polish remover
“pears soap”
Winsor and Newton brush cleaner
Toothpaste
White face paint left on overnight then washed off
Olive Oil Soap from the Body Shop
White Spirits
Da Vinci Soap

I have tried oh so very many of these (aside from the specific soap brands that weren’t in my area), and ONE worked, really well.  Like, shockingly well, considering how many YEARS the stains have been on my Mehron practice head.  I’m talking stubborn, well-known stainers like Wolfe black, TAG teals and pinks, and Paradise Brilliant blues.

Here’s what worked for me. (disclaimer: I have a Mehron practice head and this worked on my head.  Every brand of head is different, and just like staining on human skin, will come off with different things.)

91% Isopropyl Alchol and a Magic Eraser.

90% alcohol and a Magic Eraser

I don’t know why I didn’t try this sooner…probably because the huge list above of possible solutions was too overwhelming to eventually land on the right one.

Your alcohol has to be 90% or higher.  You can find this at your local drug store. In some states you will have to ask a pharmacist to get it from behind the counter or order it.  In my town, it was right on the shelf in the first aid section at Walgreens.

Mr Clean Magic Erasers can be found just about anywhere in the cleaning supplies.  You can also often find generic store brands that work just as well.

Pour a little of the alcohol on your Magic Eraser to wet it.

Rub and scrub your head.  Use a circular motion, an angular motion, a linear motion…whatever motion floats yer boat!

Wow, this really worked for me, with very little effort!

Look at how this Wolfe black stain (above) just wipes right off!

So how do you get the crud out of those little cracks in the eyes, nose and mouth?

I pressed my wet sponge into the cracks, leaving some alchocol and Magic Eraser magical goodness in the cracks.

Then I took an old toothbrush and scrubbed the magic around. This got most of the gunk out of the cracks. 

Check out this shot where I have used this method on half the head, so you can see the before and after.

Amazing, huh?!  I really didn’t think this was going to work…just like every other method I have tried.  But, it really did!

Just to recap…here is a before and after pic of the head, after I did the whole thing…

before
after

Yes, this is the SAME head!!  Can you believe it?!

Remember, the stains on my before picture were there for years.  They are also there after I tried pure acetone nail polish remover, mineral spirits, rubbing alcohol, an overnight soak in coconut oil, olive oil, Barkeepers Friend, and just about every other cleaner and scrubber in my house.

So there you have it, folks!  If you are frustrated with your stained head, give THIS idea a try…it just might be the one that works for you, too!!

(If you have a different brand of head, and have your own method to clean it, please help us all out and share below in the comments!)

Click here to see my post on how to clean your brush tub!

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How to Clean Your Brush Tub

This is going to be a first in a little series of posts focusing on how to clean your face painting supplies.  Keeping your kit clean is not only important for your client’s perception of your safety and hygiene practices, but also for extending the life of your tools!

So, for our first installment of cleaning tips, we’ll start with our brush tub!!

I absolutely love my brush tub, and ever since the first time I used it, I’ve been unable to go back to a regular cup of water.  We have two styles of brush tub’s…Loew-Cornell’s Brush Tub and Brush Tub II. The little ridges on the bottom are so fantastic for cleaning the paint out of your bristles….yet they can be a bear to clean themselves!  Here’s how I do it.

Get yourself some of these wipes…Lysol or Clorox wipes work great.  And no, I do not use these types of wipes on kids’ faces!  I only use these for cleaning objects.  😉

After giving it a good rinse with water, wipe down the outsides and the larger surfaces inside with a wipe.  I find that these wipes have gotten every stain out of my tub for years.  Of course it may depend on the type of paint you use, but I use Kyrolan, Paradise, TAG, Global, and Wolfe.

Once you wipe off all of the larger, flat surfaces, it’s time to tackle the corners and ridges.  Find a brush with a skinny handle.  If you have one with a pointed tip on the end, like this one of my Loew-Cornell 7000C series brushes with a nice, sharp, pointed, acrylic handle:

Lay the handle of your brush on the wipe, and wrap the wipe around the brush handle.

Now, use the brush handle to push the wipe down between each of the ridges.  The sharp point on these brush handles gets into every corner of the tub and easily cleans off the paint when positioned at the right angle!  Move the wipe around as you go so you continually get a cleaner area of the wipe.

Once you get all the pain out, give the tub a good rinse, as you may have loosened up some more paint that will rinse out.  I like to use my kitchen sprayer and shoot it right into the ridges.  This not only removes more paint, but it’s also important to remove the cleaning chemicals that are on the wipes, so they don’t end up in your brush rinse water.

Aaah, much better!!  Ready for the next gig! 🙂

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Trick Out Your Kit at Paintertainment!

Did you know that we have a growing assortment of supplies made to help you trick out your guitar case, DJ Hero case, or whatever cool container you’re transforming into a kit? 

This week we just got in some fun duct tape! We’ll be adding more patterns in the future, but are starting with three designs that are great for face painters.  I’ve personally decorated the outside of my FatMax with duct tape, and I also wrap it around my spray bottles and rinse water jars to coordinate my tools!

We also have rolls of adhesive backed magnet tape, for those of you who like to line your kit with metal and have your paints attach magnetically.

Also, you can find some unbreakable plastic mirror sheets that are perfect for mounting inside your kit lid.  They can be cut with a scissors too, so you can even use them to replace broken glass mirrors.

I recently purchased a guitar case that I’ve transformed into a sweet setup, and I hope to do a blog post about it as soon as I can gather up all the photos I’ve taken of it! Stay tuned! 🙂

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More New Products in May!

We have all kinds of new products available this month!!  But first, I’ll start by introducing our three new package deals, all centered around one stroke face painting!  The more you buy, the more you save with these great package deals, and you can even choose which one stroke cakes to customize your own deal.

STARTER Package Deal – Great for those looking to try out one strokes and see if it’s for them! Save $4.00
SUPER Package Deal – Great for those looking to add one strokes to their face painting repertoire! Save $5.00
SUPREME Package Deal – For those who are serious about taking on one strokes! Save $20.00!

Check out the photos below and click the links to go directly to our other brand new additions to the shop…

Foam Applicator Brushes, great for making beads, bubbles, etc!
Hot Wingz “Wild” Stencil

Hot Wingz “Cajun” Stencil

5″ Ninja Faces

Festive Alien Assortment

Black Cat Faces

Bloodshot Eyes

Frankenstein Faces

11″ Ninja Faces

Pirate Skulls

Skulls

Spider Eyes

Witch Faces

5″ Rounds

5″ Clear Rounds

We’ve added Goldenrod and Carribbean Blue to our 260Q Assortment!

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Painted Jewelry CONTEST! Win Global Products!

Our friendly Global product distributors have graciously donated a great prize for our first ever competition!!

Here are the details…

The theme is painted jewelry.  Show us what you can do with painted jewelry, and one lucky artist will win three Global paints (Orange, Metallic Silver, and dark green) and a white glitter gel!

HOW TO ENTER: 
1) “Like” our Facebook page if you haven’t already.
2) Become a follower of our Blog.
3) Email a photo of your design (painted on an actual person) to Gretchen(at)Paintertainment(dot)com and type “Jewelry Contest” in the subject line.  Be SURE to include your full name and mailing address so I know where to send the prize if you win!

RULES:
– You may enter up to 3 designs per artist!
– All entries are due by midnight (Central time) on May 23rd, 2014.
– One winner will be announced no later than May 27th, 2014.
– Paintertainment reserves the right to share your images on the Facebook page and/or blog so that everyone can see all of the fabulous entries! Please do NOT enter if you don’t want your photos shown.

If you have any questions, feel free to post them here or email me!

Thank you and happy painting!!  🙂

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New Custom Face Painting Word Menu’s Now Available!

We have just added a very exciting new option to our shop…the ability to customize your own face painting word menu!! 

We have an assortment of custom designed word illustrations to choose from.  Simply choose the size and orientation that you’d like your file to be laid out in, add the number of designs to your shopping cart that you’d like (just $1.00 each), let me know which words you’d like via email, and I will build and email you a custom file!  You can then print it, laminate it, frame it, etc!

You can also add your own company logo or text for just $3.00! 
Check it out today! Got more ideas for word menu options?  Let me know! I do plan to add more and would love to hear your input!  🙂  
Happy painting!!
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Fun New Loew-Cornell Double Time Brushes are Here!!

I just received a new shipment of brushes today from Loew-Cornell and had a lot of fun experimenting with them!  These unique styles are great for speeding up detailed patterns like stripes, plaid, fur, checkerboards, and more!

Don’t expect these to be around much longer, because this style of brushes were actually discontinued by Loew-Cornell back in 2005.  I was able to get some of what they have left though, and am finding them to be really fun to experiment with!  Each brush is available now for $5.00 each…for as long as supplies last!

Here are some photos of today’s experiments with these brushes….

2-head liner

2-head liner used for whiskers
5-head liner patterns
Flag – stripes and stars done with a 5-head liner! Can also do with a 2 or 3-head liner.

Fur done with a 5-head liner

Repeat overlapping lines for super quick and uniform lace designs!

5-head liner is great for musical designs, too!

Plaid Striper

Checkerboard Brush

Checkerboard brush used with TAG one-stroke Tropical cake to make a basket weave

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More New Goodies Now in the Shop!

Four huge packages arrived on my doorstep today and I’m happy to announce that we have several new items now available!

We now have the bee bodies without black tips!

Now, joining our bear heads, we have BIG bear heads!  Flip them upside down and you also have an instant body AND head!

These caterpillar balloons are great not only for caterpillars, but make great butterfly bodies!

These 16″ white plastic balloon sticks add a whole new experience to your balloon animals, giving the kids a stick to carry their animals and walk them around the room!

1/2″ Pom Poms are super fun to put inside your clear balloons! We now have packages of 100 in multiple colors for just $1.99!

These cool, un-breakable, plastic mirrors measure 6″ x 9″ and are just $4.00 and can be cut with a scissor!  These are great for those of you who are customizing cases and turning them into face paint kits.  They are super lightweight and can easily be mounted inside your case, or even can be used to replace a broken hand mirror!

These cool little .75″ diameter foam daubers fit right on your fingertips!  You get three of them for just $2.50!

We also just got in another big shipment of Global makeup, and hope to have some more Wolfe AND more new Loew-Cornell brushes coming in soon!  Stay tuned for updates!

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New Products and My Recent “Doodles!”

We have quite a few more new products available in the shop now!  In my process of gradually replacing all of my Kryolan brand products, I am phasing in some fantastic new brushes from Loew-Cornell, as well as a growing assortment of palette refills for both Paradise and Wolfe palettes.

This new brush shown below is one of the specialty shaped brushes, in the same line as Loew-Cornell’s Flora and double filbert brushes.  This “Flora Round” brush is designed specifically for creating teardrops and double-dip petal shapes! At first glance it looks like a typical round brush, but the point of it does extend out longer and more narrow, allowing you to paint a nice, crisp point. I hope to play with mine this week and post some photos of what it can do.

Loew-Cornell Flora Round Brush

 Above is our new 1/2″ Loew-Cornell flat brush.  I use my 1/2″ flat brushes frequently when painting with one-stroke cakes, when I want to only pick up a couple of the colors in a split cake. My new One Stroke Face Painting Book (which I’ve just re-stocked as well!) shows many designs that use this brush to pick up 2-3 colors.

Below are photos of the Loew-Cornell round brushes we are now carrying, in a #2, #3, and #5.  Their golden taklon fibers are durable and precise.  The handles on these brushes below, and the two brushes above, are made of a smoky gray acrylic, which helps them hold up well to moisture.

No 2 round
No 3 Round

No 5 round

 I’ve also now added Loew-Cornell’s “Maxine’s Foamie” foam applicators!  The foam heads on these are about 3/4″ in diameter, and the handle is made of wood.

Loew-Cornell 3/4″ Foamie

 Be sure to check out our full line of brushes and sponges!

In addition to the brushes, we’re now carrying Wolfe Appetizer palette refills, and have added refill sizes of Paradise’s very popular “Brilliant” line of metallic paints.

Wolfe appetizer palette refills
Paradise Brilliant palette refills

Unfortunately my shipment from Wolfe was missing the black and purple refills, so I should be getting those in soon!

Now that you’ve sat through all of the new product news, I’ll leave you with a little painty inspiration! Here’s a design I painted on my arm last week.  First I did the monarch alone, and later added the background….

I’ve also been working on water drops these past couple weeks.  Above I added water to the leaves, and below I tried to stretch my artistic brain to make a drop that lies over two different colors! 😉

Thanks for stopping by!