Left to right:
Pentel Color Brush, Pentel Fountain Brush Pen, Kuretake Fountain Brush Pen, Sailor DE Brush Style Fountain Pen (55 degree angle), Sakura Pigma Brush Pen, and for comparison to an actual brush, Winsor and Newton Series 7 No 2.

I drew a bunch of similar looking heads for comparison, and then a few lines underneath showing the width of the line when the brush is pushed down to its maximum spread, and a few increasingly finer lines. This test was performed on Bienfang bristol board.

Pros: dark ink, large brush, relatively responsive, ink cartridge lasts a long time
Cons: not waterproof, no converter, ink flow is not as good as some others (can be dry, especially on rougher paper)

This pen comes with cartridges, and though a plastic pen, is a little nicer than the Pentel Color Brush. This one actually looks like a pen instead of a giant plastic thing. The ink was not as opaque as the Pentel Color Brush, but it performed pretty well. The ink flow is a little better than the Pentel Color Brush, but it seems to get a little dry on rougher paper or with faster strokes. It seems to be a popular pen.
Pros: ink is waterproof, cartridges are convenient, decent ink flow, but not as good as Kuretake
Cons: no converter available

The Kuretake Fountain Pen Brush ($30) was my favorite of the bunch (next to the actual brush, of course). It was very responsive and had good ink flow. The ink is darker than the Pentel fountain pen, and it also works with the Platinum converter, so you can use whatever ink you desire. The pen snaps back to a nice sharp point. It is a little softer than the Pentel fountain pen. The pen has an aluminum barrel that comes in black or a snazzy red.
Pros: Good ink flow, works with Platinum converter, most like a real brush
Cons: not waterproof


The Sakura Pigma Brush Pen doesn't have actual bristles like the other pens tested. I've had this pen for a while, and I find that the tip gets worn easily. It is not very flexible and functions more like a marker. I find it most useful for filling in areas rather than outlining details.
Pros: waterproof, inexpensive
Cons: doesn't last long, less line variability and control (doesn't mimic the feel of a brush very well)
Lastly, here's the sketch with the actual brush for comparison. I found the Pentel Color Brush was similar for bristle spread, but the Kuretake was closer for feel, ink flow and line quality. I saw that Jet Pens also sells a sable brush pen, which I bet would be awesome, but it's also pretty pricey.
In the end, once you scan these in, they all look pretty similar.

7 comments:
Interesting read. Thanks for the review. I like working with pen brush together with Pilot G-Tec-C4 :)
I use a Pentel brush but I find the cartridges way to expensive and they only last me a day sometimes. So I started refilling the cartridge with a small syringe. Works perfectly, even with real indian ink.
Very useful. I looked all over the net for examples of Pentel Pocket vs. Kuretake No. 13.
Thanks a lot!
What a thorough comparison and certainly makes it easier for those of us looking to make more informed choices.
Many thanks.
Very informative for the users. I am using The pigma brush, hopefully would love to explore the others.
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I love how detailed your brush pen comparison test is!
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