African Fiber Fan Paint Brush with Vintage Quill Bobbin Spool Handle
African Fiber Fan Paint Brush with Vintage Quill Bobbin Spool Handle
This listing is for a made-to-order fan-shaped stiff fiber bristle that can make a wide variety of marks, and are super flexible. The handles are made from vintage quill bobbins. The handles are smooth and surprisingly light (@2 oz).
Fan #1 has a metal band around the top of the handle and a leather hanging strap on the end. The ferrule also has metal rings, 3 in total.
- Handle: 7" in length
- Bristle: 6.5" in length
Fan #2 has 3 metal bands on the ferrule.
- Handle: 9" in length
- Bristle: 6.5" - 7" in length
Fan Brush #3 has 3 metal bands around the ferrule and an aluminum wrap on the handle
- Handle: 7" in length
- Bristle: 6.5" to 7" in length
This is a unique brush while beautiful was made to make art :)
(Click on the image below to see brush demonstration)
Antique Wood Bobbin Spool History
"The Industrial Revolution (1790's - 1860's) was an important time in America's history. The Revolution brought about many changes in the labor and textile industries. On average women worked a 72-hour week with few breaks. The mill itself was a dangerous place to work with shuttles flying off looms, and a constant humid, 100-degree climate. In response to the poor working conditions, the women of the mills organized America's first labor strikes and formed the first labor unions.
Bobbins and the machinery they ran on were some of the greatest inventions of the Victorian Era. Developed as a way to manage heaps of thread, bobbins revolutionized textile manufacturing during the Industrial Revolution. Many textile mills had their own machine shops and their own favorite shape of bobbin which accounts for their varied designs. Traditional wooden bobbins have been retired from most current day manufacturing. Modern economics does not favor the use of wooden bobbins since a large degree of handwork is involved in making them and they are not well suited to synthetic fibers and high-speed machinery". (source Bemidji Woolen Mills)