Trying to catch up on brush scores.
I had this 10066 for a while, and while I really liked the knot, I hated the plastic handle. It was so light, it just felt crappy to use. So when Tom Zmuda from Manhandled Woods gifted this one to me along with a couple I had ordered from him, it just begged for that Omega knot. It took about 30 seconds to knock it out of the Omega hadle, and was glued into this Zebra wood a few minutes later. It is a light handle too, maybe a bit too light, and maybe should have a little weight added. It is still a definite improvement over the handle it came with however, and looks great with the boar knot in it. It fits in the hand nicely; a near perfect fit, so it doesn't need any pronounced shaping to give it a good grip. A fairly tight knot, the brush doesn't have a ton of bloom to it. The tips are extremely well broken in, and it is pretty much as soft as a best badger. It loads as well as one would expect from a boar its size, and still has a pretty good scrub to it for a bristle brush with as many shaves on it as it as this one has. It isn't uber stuffed in there, so it lets the lather flow really well. All in all this is a great boar brush for someone who doesn't want something Pro sized.
The Zenith brush busted onto the scene somewhat recently, at least in our market, and have really gone after the Omega Pro lovers with their boar brushes. With heavy chromed aluminum handles shaped almost exactly like an Omega 49, they definitely raise the bar of the quality in pro boars. The handle is a bit larger than I really like. It is definitely easy to hold onto, and maybe it I used it ten times a day shaving people for a living I would appreciate the large size more. It is simple though and definitely has that old school look to it. The brush has a densely packed knot with tips that are a bit slower to split and soften than its Omega counterpart, but when they do get there, they are even a bit softer. This brush packs good backbone, which makes it load like a champ, and scrub the same way. It does trap lather a bit though, so you need to make sure you load it up but good. (@FrugalFrank

) A guy can find himself working to paint on those last cleanups, but squeeze out two passes worth when he is all done. Are they worth $20 more dollars than an Omega 49? It really depends on the shaver. It has a much better handle, and it is denser and softer. So even at three times the cost of a 49, you are still only talking about $30, which is very affordable.
It think there are only two more brushes left that anyone picked. I will do those two by the end of the weekend, and we can get some prizes picked.

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