Review: Rosemary Reversible Travel Watercolour Brushes

As I continue to explore compact travel watercolour brushes, I discovered Rosemary & Co. They are a company based in England and have been making artist brushes for more than 30 years.

The brushes in this review are the Rosemary reversible travel watercolour brushes.

Rosemary Reversible Travel Watercolour Brushes
Rosemary has a whole set of watercolour brushes with different brush tips, namely,

  • R1 Pocket Pure Kolinsky Sable Pointed Size 6
  • R2 Pocket Pure Kolinsky Sable Pointed Size 8
  • R3 Pocket Pure Kolinsky Sable Pointed Size 10
  • R4 Pocket Pure Kolinsky Sable One Stroke
  • R5 Pocket Pure Kolinsky Sable Rigger
  • R6 Pocket Pure Kolinsky Filbert
  • R7 Pocket Pure Kolinsky Comber
  • R8 Pocket Pure Kolinsky Mop
  • R9 Pocket Pure Squirrel Hair Mop
  • R10 Pocket Golden Synthetic Pointed
  • R11 Pocket Pure Red Sable Pointed

It's an exciting set compared to other manufacturers, such as Da Vinci and Escoda, who only offer round tips as travel brushes. Check out my review of those brushes, namely Da Vinci Series 1503, Series 910 and the Escoda Reserva. I'll make some brief comparisons in this review too.

Rosemary Reversible Travel Watercolour Brushes

For this review, I bought the R1, R2, R3 and R11, as shown above from left to right.

I had bought the R3 Kolinsky Sable and R11 Red Sable just to see what's the difference between the two. There are none significant as far as I'm concern.

Since there are no labels on the brush, I could have mixed up the R3 and R11 brushes and can no longer tell the difference. Their hair looks similar and the size is quite similar as well.

Rosemary Reversible Travel Watercolour Brushes

The first thing I recommend when you get the Rosemary brushes is to write the sizes on the body with a marker, and use a tape to protect that writing. You can then easily identify the brushes.

Design

Rosemary Reversible Travel Watercolour Brushes

Rosemary Reversible Travel Watercolour Brushes

Rosemary's reversible watercolour brushes come in sleek shiny metal bodies. Compared to a traditional wooden pencil, the brush's body is slightly thicker, height slightly longer because of the hair, and weighs slightly heavier. It's a lightweight brush. Da Vinci and Escoda's offerings that feel more substantial.

The brush comes in two parts, the top half with the hair and the bottom half that also doubles up as a cap.

The cap has a small ventilation hole which you may hear other artists say help with air ventilation, but in actual fact is not that useful (same for other brands), so if you need to dry your brush, you should still dry them without the cap.

Rosemary Reversible Travel Watercolour Brushes

When dried, if the hair does not stick together, I would put some water to get a sharp point before putting the cap on.

Rosemary Reversible Travel Watercolour Brushes

Be more careful when putting the cap on so as not to damage the hair bristles, more so for bigger brushes because the cap's opening is relatively smaller.

Rosemary Reversible Travel Watercolour Brushes
Both size 10. Rosemary on the left, Escoda on the right

Hair

Quality of the sable hair is fantastic. It's firm and snaps to a point after each stroke on the paper. I do notice that Da Vinci brushes are slightly firmer, in other words, Rosemary brushes are slightly softer. I prefer Da Vinci's firmer hair more but if you don't have two brushes side by side to compare, it does not make a significant difference.

As compared to synthetic hair brushes, the sable hair can hold more water which makes them better for painting washes because you don't have to reload the brush that many times.

You can also flick the brush hard to force out the water easily, something you cannot do with synthetic brushes. With the drier brush, you can use it to collect pools of water on your paper, or clean it and mix new colours.

Comparison

Below I'm comparing Rosemary sizes 6, 8 and 10. Note that Rosemary brushes are slightly larger.

Rosemary Reversible Travel Watercolour Brushes

Rosemary Reversible Travel Watercolour Brushes

Below I'm comparing size 6 for the two Da Vinci travel brushes, Maestro (bottom) and Maestro Voyage (second bottom), Escoda, and the Rosemary.

Rosemary Reversible Travel Watercolour Brushes

Rosemary Reversible Travel Watercolour Brushes

From the close up on those size 6 brushes, the four on the left, you can see that Rosemary have more volume.

Conclusion

The Rosemary reversible travel watercolour brushes are fantastic and definitely worth the money. They are competitively priced compared to other brands.

The sable hair quality is indistinguishable compared with other brands. Maybe Da Vinci is firmer, but it could be my mind playing tricks. I started out with Da Vinci so I may have a preference for them.

The main difference between between Rosemary travel brushes and others would be the body. If you like lightweight with a uniform body shape, then get Rosemary. Some artists like a more substantial feel and weight, in which case I would probably recommend the Escoda Reserva. Or for the utilitarian plastic aesthetics, then Da Vinci Maestro could be the one for you.

And again, remember to be careful when putting the cap so as not to damage hair. Applies to all brands actually.

Highly recommended. Value for money.

Availability

As far as I know, you can only get them on Rosemary's website:
https://www.rosemaryandco.com/watercolour-brushes/pocket-reversible

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6 Comments

Hi,

Hi,

I couldn't tell from the photo comparisons, but I understand the Rosemary is slightly bigger than Escoda? Would you say a the #8 Rosemary would be the same size as a #10 Escoda? or is the difference negligible?

Thanks

I just got my latest order

I just got my latest order from Rosemary. I have been a fan for awhile. I have tried alot of different brands but, nothing compares to Rosemary brushes.
I have her Eclipse for my Watercolor pencils ( I like painting with pencils) and they hold their shape and work really great for both watercolor and regular colored pencils.
I have a mix of the Kolinsky and sable and synthetic for watercolors and all perform excellent.
I also have a couple brushes from Trekell. They are good but, Rosemary is better.
I find her brushes are best for fine lines and detail work in watercolor.
I live in the US and order from her site in England. Shipping is the same as if I ordered from somewhere here in the States.
I probably will use her brushes pretty much exclusively as I have not found a better brush.

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