![]() Watercolor brush pens seemed the next logical step. I'd tried a variety of brushes, water soluble inks, and water brushes. Twenty watercolor brush pens? Isn't that a bit.excessive? Sure, I've tried pans and tubes, a variety of watercolor pencils, and even Inktense ink stones. I added a full year to my cart, 20 colorful brush pens in a vivid assortment of hues, and proceeded to check out. I debated buying just one season of 5 colors, available in Summer, Winter, Spring, and Fall, but I knew that if I liked them, I'd want the rest immediately. ![]() Watercolor brush pens would offer a very elegant solution, if they were capable of pulling off convincing watercolor effects. I'm a big fan of Japanese art supplies, and I'd wanted to take up watercolor sketching. Akashiya Sai watercolor brush pens offered a marker-like watercolor brush pen, and although I'd tried watercolor brush pens in the past and been burned, it'd been years since I'd tried one. ![]() ![]() I'd been getting into watercolors, trying out new things, and I felt open to a little experimentation. The phrase intrigued me as I browsed Jetpens, idly window shopping one cold winter evening. ![]()
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