SKU:
Luxury Vegan Ebony Angled Flat Small Eyebrow Brush
Luxury Vegan Ebony Angled Flat Small Eyebrow Brush
Couldn't load pickup availability
Product dimensions:
Brush head width 3.61cm
Brush head length 5.24cm
Tube length 4.34cm
Handle length 10.15cm
The Bristles — Premium Tapered Synthetic Fiber
The Small Eyebrow Brush is the precision partner to the Big Eyebrow Brush. Where the larger brush fills and sets the main body of the brow, this brush works on the parts that define its character: the tail, the arch peak, the front edge, and any individual hair stroke work in sparse areas.
The bristle head is small, angled, and firm — proportioned for the fine work of building tail definition with powder or pomade without the color flooding outside the brow boundary. The angled tip lets you use the corner for hairline strokes and the flat face for filling, all with a single brush. The fiber density is high for the head size, which keeps the deposit controlled and buildable: one pass gives you a natural fill, two passes give you a defined arch, and the brush stays obedient throughout.
Synthetic fiber is the obvious choice for a brow brush: brow pomade and brow gel are waxy, sticky products that would coat and clog a natural-hair bristle within days. These sealed fibers wipe clean in seconds.
Before a single fiber enters production, it's graded to a tolerance of ±5 microns in diameter. That level of consistency is why the brush fans out evenly, holds its dome shape wash after wash, and never develops the lopsided drift you've probably noticed in cheaper brushes.
Each individual fiber is then hand-sorted, oriented tip-up, and bundled into a dense knot — a process that takes trained hands, not a machine, because only a human touch can confirm that every tip is aligned before the bundle is locked in place. Once the knot is set, we inject cosmetic-grade epoxy adhesive deep into the ferrule cavity. This is the same class of adhesive used in medical-grade tool manufacturing: it cures hard, holds through repeated water and cleanser exposure, and produces zero off-gassing odor. Cheap brushes rely on EVA hot-melt glue — it's fast to apply and falls apart in warm water. We don't use it anywhere in this set.
After curing, every brush head passes a shedding stress test — a mechanical simulation of repeated application and washing cycles — before it's approved for assembly. Zero shedding tolerance. If it sheds in the test, it never reaches you.
The Ferrule — Solid Copper, Nickel-Electroplated
Most ferrules in the market are aluminum. Ours are solid copper. This is not a cosmetic choice.
| Our Copper Ferrule | Typical Aluminum Ferrule | |
| Hardness | ~3–10× harder than aluminum | Soft; deforms under pressure |
| Density | 8.96 g/cm³ — satisfying weight in hand | 2.7 g/cm³ — lightweight, cheap feel |
| Corrosion resistance | Copper base + nickel plating = multi-layer protection | Anodized surface only; grays over time |
| Crimp precision | Seamless, high-force double crimp achievable | Prone to cracking under high crimp force |
| Surface finish | Mirror-bright after nickel plating | Dull matte or painted |
Here's how the copper gets its armor. After the tube is formed and shaped, it enters a multi-stage electroplating line. First, the raw copper surface is degreased and acid-activated — two steps most budget manufacturers skip, and the reason their plating peels. Then a base copper strike layer is deposited, giving the subsequent nickel layer a molecularly bonded foundation to grip. The nickel plating itself is applied at a controlled thickness of 5–15 microns, forming a dense, corrosion-resistant shell. The outermost layer — a bright chrome or gold finish — is what you see and feel: hard, reflective, and immune to the tarnishing that makes aluminum ferrules look cheap within months.
Once the bristle knot is set inside the ferrule, the tube is double-crimped: two precisely aligned compression passes on opposite sides of the ferrule, creating a mechanical lock around the hair bundle that glue alone could never achieve. Then, the joint between the ferrule and the handle is sealed with structural epoxy resin — a physical waterproof barrier that stops wash water from wicking into the wood and causing the handle swelling and cracking that ruins so many "premium" brushes.
The Handle — Solid Ebony Wood
We use ebony. Not ebony-finish. Not ebony-stained beech. Solid ebony — one of the densest, hardest, and most storied woods on earth.
| Ebony (Diospyros spp.) | Common Beech Handle | |
| Janka Hardness | 3,220 lbf | ~1,300 lbf |
| Density | 1,089 kg/m³ | ~720 kg/m³ |
| Sinks in water? | Yes — denser than water | No |
| Natural color | Deep black from within the heartwood | Pale; requires dyeing |
| Surface pores | Extremely tight; near-zero grain pores | Visible grain; requires lacquer to seal |
| Natural antimicrobial | High tannin content; naturally inhibits bacteria | Requires treatment |
Ebony is hard enough that it dulls the CNC cutting tools that shape it — which is why most manufacturers don't bother. We do, because nothing else handles the way ebony handles. Its density of 1,089 kg/m³ means it is literally heavier than water — drop a piece into a glass and it sinks. That same density is what gives this handle its distinctive heft: not heavy enough to fatigue your hand, but substantial enough to tell you, the moment you pick it up, that this is not a toy.
The color is not dye. It is the heartwood of the tree — the oldest, most compressed rings at the core, black because of centuries of mineral and tannin accumulation. A beech handle stained black will fade and streak at the edges within months of regular washing. This handle won't. The color goes all the way through.
Every blank is CNC-turned to a diameter tolerance of ±0.1 mm so it fits the copper ferrule with zero play, then hand-sanded through progressive grits — 120, 240, 400, and finally 800 — until the surface reaches a near-glassy smoothness without a single coat of lacquer. Each finished handle is individually weighed; any piece outside our weight specification is rejected.
How It All Comes Together
The bristle knot is set in the ferrule. The ferrule is crimped, glued, and sealed onto the handle. The finished brush is weighed, measured, and stress-tested. Only then does it leave the factory.
Best For: Brow tail shaping, arch definition, hairline-stroke brow fill, sparse area building, brow cleanup
Share
