Paint by Numbers Brush Guide: Which Brush for Which Area
Your paint by numbers brush guide starts here. Using the right brush for each area is the single biggest factor in getting clean, professional-looking results. Most kits come with 3 brushes — and each one has a specific job. Here is when to use each one.
At ArtistryByNumbers, every kit includes 3 premium brushes. Free Worldwide Shipping and Buy 2 Get 1 Free.
The Fine Detail Brush (Size 0 or 1)
Your precision instrument. Use this brush for:
- Any section smaller than your pinky fingernail
- Outlining the edges of larger sections before filling
- Areas where multiple colors meet in tight spaces
- Facial details in portraits (eyes, lips, fine lines)
- Thin lines, branches, whiskers, or hair strands
This is the brush you will use most often. A quality fine brush with a sharp point is worth its weight in gold. Our kits include synthetic sable fine brushes that hold their point through the entire project.
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The Medium Brush (Size 2 or 3)
Your workhorse. Use this brush for:
- Mid-sized sections (roughly thumbnail to coin-sized)
- Filling in outlined sections
- Most general painting work
- Areas requiring moderate precision but not extreme detail
The medium brush balances precision with coverage. You will switch between the fine and medium brush frequently during a session.
The Broad Brush (Size 5 or 6)
Your efficiency tool. Use this brush for:
- Large background areas (sky, water, grass, solid walls)
- Any section larger than a coin
- First coats on big areas where speed matters more than precision
The broad brush covers area quickly and evenly. Use it to knock out the large sections fast, then switch to finer brushes for detail work around the edges.
Brush Switching Strategy
- Start each color with the broad brush — do all large sections of that color first
- Switch to medium — do all mid-sized sections
- Finish with fine — do all tiny sections and touch up edges
- Clean thoroughly before switching colors
Common Brush Mistakes
- Using the medium brush for tiny sections — switch to fine, always
- Too much paint on the brush — dip just the tip
- Not cleaning between colors — rinse thoroughly, dab on paper towel
- Pressing too hard — let the brush tip do the work, not your hand pressure
- Using a worn-out brush — if the tip is splayed, it is time for a fresh one
No experience needed — the right brush for the right area, and the painting takes care of itself. Joined by thousands of painters worldwide. Money-back guarantee.
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