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Magic Brush | Premium Kolinsky-Blend Acrylic Nail Brush
Magic Brush bristles close-up showing extra-tapered Kolinsky tip
Nail tech holding Magic Brush picking up acrylic bead
Magic Brush applying acrylic to a sculpted nail
Magic Brush wooden handle and ferrule detail
Magic Brush size 10 and size 12 side-by-side comparison

Magic Brush | Premium Kolinsky-Blend Acrylic Nail Brush

32.00 USD
SKU: MB-10
Description

The brush hundreds of nail techs helped us build. The one you'll keep reaching for.

Made from the end tail of Kolinsky — 85% Kolinsky, 15% nylon. The ratio that actually works on a working table. 95% of brushes out there aren't truly 100% Kolinsky anyway, and honestly, they shouldn't be. Pure Kolinsky is too soft to mold acrylic the way a real bead needs it. The nylon gives it the structure and snap that pure hair can't.

The magic? An extra-tapered tip. Cleaner edges. Sharper smile lines. The kind of finish that quietly does the talking for you.

Size 10 — for smaller beads, finer detail, shorter sets.
Size 12 — for larger beads, faster builds, longer sculpted sets.

Most techs end up with both.

Care

Treated right, this brush lasts years. Treated wrong, it's gone in a week.

  • Clean with monomer between sets. Dip, swirl, blot on a lint-free towel.
  • Never soak in acetone. It's the fastest way to ruin natural hair.
  • For stubborn product, last resort: acetone-free brush cleaner. Then re-condition with monomer.
  • Store flat or bristles-down. Never bristles-up while wet.
  • Re-shape the tip with a drop of monomer after every use.

FAQs

Is the Magic Brush real Kolinsky?

Yes — 85% Kolinsky end tail with 15% nylon for structure. We don't claim 100% because almost nothing on the market truly is, and pure Kolinsky is too soft to mold acrylic anyway.

How long does it last?

With proper care, years. Most brush failures are care failures.

Size 10 or Size 12?

Size 10 for smaller beads and detail work. Size 12 for larger beads and longer sets. Both are great — it comes down to how you work.

Can I use it for builder gel or polygel?

No — natural hair absorbs gel. Use a fully synthetic brush for gel work.