DIY Blogger Diane Henkler of

  1. Amazon Purdy Paint Brushes
  2. Best Purdy Brush For Cabinets Reviews
  3. Lowe's Purdy Brush
InMyOwnStyle.com
  • This is a versatile, high-performing 9-inch roller cover with a 3/8-inch nap. Made from a derivative of nylon, the cover picks up a lot of paint and rolls it into a lint-free finish over smooth.
  • For water based finishes, you can use a 100% nylon brush, also known as a synthetic bristle brush. For oil based finishes, a brush that combines ox hair with Chinese bristle can be the best option, these are often called natural bristle brushes. Tip 4 – Consider the density of the Brush for Cabinet Painting.
tells Glidden

Best Budget: Wooster Brush Q3118-1 at Amazon. 'This durable brush won’t begin to break after a few strokes.' Best Kit: Presa Premium Set at Amazon. 'The kit comes with two large brushes for large surface painting and three smaller, narrower brushes for detailed work.' Best Four-Inch: Purdy. Best brushes for Annie Sloan chalk paint. First coat over a waxy or varnished surface, a 3″ FTP annihilates the Picasso. As an idea of how good the FTP is, in the picture, that waxed drawer is about 3 feet wide. The brush that painted those 4 lines, a 2.5″ Wooster Utra Pro soft, needed to be loaded once for each line. Prepare The Area & Sand The Doors. Before you get started, it's important that you properly prepare.

® about how to paint furniture.Best Purdy Brush For Cabinets
Do you use a brush or roller to paint furniture? I get asked this question often. I paint a lot of furniture—tables, chairs, hutches, cabinets, dressers, and more. I post about all of them on my blog.
So I’ll tell you the answer is — I use both.
I use either a high-quality angled brush made for latex paintor a foam roller with rounded ends. The rounded ends keep roller marks from occurring in the painted finish.

Each piece of furniture is different and requires a different plan. I use a brush most of the time, but a roller comes in pretty handy and speeds up the process of painting large pieces of furniture.
This is a dresser I painted for one of my daughters. I used a 1-1/2″ angled brush to apply the primer coat and the paint to the detailed molding under the top of the dresser. I used a foam roller with round edges to prime and then paint the large flat areas of the piece.
I also use a roller when I paint the front of a dresser and the drawers. If the drawers have detailed or rounded edges, I use the angled brush. After rolling the paint on I fix any drips or excess paint with a few dabs of the paint brush.Best Purdy Brush For Cabinets

When I am painting a piece of furniture that has grooves in it, I use a roller first and then use a brush to paint into the grooves.
If you are thinking of painting a piece of furniture, it’s best to have both a brush and a roller handy. Along with the brush and roller, you should have a small clean container or tray to pour your paint into. Keeping it small allows you to hold the container in one hand and the brush or roller in the other as you work around the piece.
To keep your brushes and rollers in good shape so that you can continue to use them, wash each out thoroughly with soap and water and hang them upside down to dry after each use.

My friend John asked me to come over and help him with some crown molding he was getting ready to put up in his new family room. He had some beautiful poplar boards milled to match the trim in the rest of his house, and while I would have opted for a stain to highlight the wavy grain, John and Becky (mostly Becky) wanted it painted. “Happy wife, happy life.” So, paint it was.

When I arrived, John had the boards laid out on sawhorses in his garage, with newspapers spread out to protect the floor. But then he handed me a two-inch wide foam brush. “John,” I said, “Haven’t you heard? The better the brush, the better the finish.”

Which launched us into a discussion of how to choose the right brush for each project. Some of John and Becky’s trim was going to be stained and sealed with a clear finish, which gave me a chance (while we were working) to explain to John how to pick the best brush when you are staining and finishing. Take a look and see what John learned.

Best

Why Does It Matter?

As I explained to John, a brush is a means of transporting a stain or finish from the can to the wood. When applying the stain, you can use either a rag or a brush. I prefer a brush, as it works better for getting stain into into corners and carvings, but you don’t have to use an expensive one or, for that matter, being excessively neat. That’s because your next step will be to wipe off any excess stain, so your rag will erase any brush marks, runs, drips or bristles left by your brush.

When laying down a smooth coat of clear finish, however, the brush will have a major impact on how it looks when it dries. That’s when picking the right brush really becomes important. And as I said to John, “You wouldn’t use a sledgehammer to drive in a finish nail, so why use a foam brush to try to lay down a smooth coat of finish?”

Foam Brushes.

I must admit, I do occasionally use foam brushes when staining a small project. Their greatest selling point is they are inexpensive.

Amazon Purdy Paint Brushes

But when it comes to applying a smooth coat of clear finish, such as polyurethane, a foam brush is not my first choice. Instead of bristles, it has a blade. The blunt sides leave two parallel ridges of finish, like a snowplow on the highway. Also, the foam head contains air, which can leave bubbles in your finish.

And if you use it for very long, the foam head begins to wear out and get floppy. It will even start to dissolve as you are brushing on stains and finishes containing mineral spirits or lacquer thinner.

Oil-Based Stains and Finishes.

Oil-based products contain mineral spirits, and for them I reach for a natural bristle brush.

For oil-based stains I use a Minwax® Wood Finish™ Stain Brush. These brushes are designed to carry a lot of stain from the can to your project, and hold up much better than foam brushes.

And unlike foam brushes, these natural bristles brushes can be cleaned with ordinary mineral spirits (paint thinner) and re-used indefinitely.

Much better than tossing dozens of foam brushes a year into the garbage can!

Water-Based Stains and Finishes.

Unlike mineral spirits, water causes natural bristles to swell. As they do, they loose their shape. Rather than use a natural bristle brush with water-based stains and clear finishes and watch it swell out of shape (top brush), I use a synthetic bristle brush, such as Minwax® Polycrylic® Brush (bottom brush). These bristles won’t absorb water and won’t lose their shape.

And clean-up is a breeze with soap and water.

Quick Tip: After cleaning, wrap the damp bristles in a paper towel, then secure with a rubber band. Once the bristles are dry, slip your brush back into its cardboard sleeve to maintain their shape.

Use the hole in the end of the handle to hang your brush to dry with the bristles pointing down, letting any remnants of stain or finish escape before hardening.

Good, Better, Best.

As I told John, not all brushes are created equal. They can range in price from less than a dollar to more than twenty dollars. You can spot the difference in three areas: the handle, the bristles, and the ferrel, which holds the bristles to the handle.

Handle – If you used a brush every day to make a living, you would want a contoured handle. Most of us are perfectly content with a standard handle that costs less to make.

Ferrel – Check the metal band holding the bristles to the handle to make sure it is secure. Tug gently on the bristles to see if the ferrel has a firm grasp on them.

Bristles – These should be soft and pliable.

In this photo, the foam brush at the top rates a “Good,” the bristle brush in the middle is a “Better,” and the professional brush at the bottom rates a “Best.”

It Takes All Three.

Just as you have different sizes and types of screwdrivers in your workshop, odds are you will need all three types of brushes: foam, natural bristle, and synthetic bristle. You will also want to have them in different widths to fit the different size of cans of stains and clear finishes. The best time to buy them is before you need them, so pick out a selection of types and sizes, store them in a drawer to keep the dirt and dust off them, and clean them after each use. The reward for your efforts will be a stain and a finish that is as smooth as any professional could have achieved.

Best Purdy Brush For Cabinets Reviews

Good Luck!

Lowe's Purdy Brush

Bruce