heres an idea
would you use a brush made with the hair of your significant other,
having a brush made with the wife´s hair ? could be a nice gift,
heres an idea
would you use a brush made with the hair of your significant other,
having a brush made with the wife´s hair ? could be a nice gift,
No
I think human hair would be too floppy to actually use as a shaving brush.
Björn
I'm both disgusted and intrigued.![]()
I mean, on the one hand it's kind of a strange idea (as you mentioned), but on the other, I've seen the lather my wife's hair gets in the shower.
Limecat can never die!!! Unless he gets curious.
Yeah thats kind of disgusting. Sort of like when Billy Bob Thorton and Angelina Jolie wore each others blood around their necks.
--Dusty R.DW.HAHB.
Human hair brushes are cheap. They're commonly used to brush the manes and tails of show horses.
It's a bit strange using the hair of someone you know but not disgusting. I think they might be too floppy to use for shaving but maybe not. I have a big bushy moustache and it feels very much like shave brush bristles. Would it be strange to use your own hair for a brush?
Richard
If human hair worked as a shave brush, you'd be able to buy one. Same with horse, camel, donkey, moose, dog, etc...
-Mason
Believe it or not, I had this very same thought a few weeks back. I was watching the stylist sweep up the veritable ton of hair from SWMBO's clip-job. You have to understand, my wife has hair so thick on her head that if she shave it, she'd lose 10 lbs. Anyway, I found myself wondering if it would make a very good brush. It strikes me as being a little "floppy" as others have mentioned, but, if you made it short bristled and very tightly packed, it might serve pretty well. Besides, that stuff holds water like a mad water holding thing. And soft? You betcha.
Hmmm... now that I think about it, where are those scissors...![]()
I know that no harm was meant, but I find the issue distasteful. Human hair was, fairly recently in the scheme of things, used for things like felt and insulation, and it didn't go over really well.
... why bring something like that up?
Björn
It's what immediately pops into my mind when someone speaks of using human hair for anything. Perhaps this is why something that seems so tame elicits the feelings of disgust mentioned by the original poster and throughout this thread. I'm putting a name to the face, so to speak.
Talk about a killjoy...
killjoy.jpeg
Ah. I have different connotations, I had long hair for a while, and when I had it cut off I donated it as wig hair for people with cancer. So for me hair is something that can be used and bring pleasure.
Of course, if concentration camps is the first thing you think of, then I can understand why you don't like the idea.
Björn
I have a lot of respect for someone who does that. My grandmother had such a wig during chemotherapy and everyone complimented her on the new style. While I don't think you're the person whose hair was used for the wig, I still wanted to say thanks.
Edit: On the other hand, she was in Nederland as well, so anything's possible.
Limecat can never die!!! Unless he gets curious.
I have two horse hair shaving brushes and I almost bought a wolverine shaving brush. The U.S. Army issued millions of horse hair shaving brushes during World War One but quit after anthrax spores were found in some. I've spoken to people who have shaving brushes made of deer, weasel, otter and rabbit. I've seen beaver and camel shaving brushes advertised but I don't think they were authentic. I understand there's a Russian shaving brush made of Siberian weasel that's supposedly better than badger but one costs thousands of dollars.
When my kids were little and had ponies we used human hair brushes to groom them... the ponies, not the kids. Human hair horse grooming brushes are commonly sold in upper tier tack shops. Human hair brushes are sold in China and Japan as paint brushes.
Richard
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