![]() Since I rarely use the chisel end, I’m always gripping the marker at its widest point, and it feels bulky and cumbersome in my hand. ![]() ![]() I’m indifferent to the taper, but this marker is so thick! The chisel end is thinner at 12mm in diameter, while the brush/bullet tip is thicker, at 15mm in diameter. The body is cylindrical, but with a taper, so one end is slightly wider in diameter than the other end. It feels like a stupid critique, but I don’t like the shape of the Promarkers. Winsor & Newton Promarker & Promarker Brush (Brushmarker). As with many other alcohol-marker lineups, they’re likely based on the Copic and Copic Sketch markers, which also have bullet/chisel and brush/chisel tips respectively. It makes sense that W&N rebranded the Brushmarker as the Promarker Brush, since this makes it much clearer that it and the Promarker are the same marker, just with different tips: the Promarker has a bullet tip and a chisel tip, while the Promarker Brush has a brush tip and a chisel tip. These two alcohol-based ink markers round out W&N’s marker collection, which also includes the Promarker Watercolor, which I reviewed when it was simply the Watercolor Marker, and the Pigment Marker, which I also reviewed. ![]() You know you’ve been sitting on a product too long when it gets rebranded before you review it, huh. Several years ago now, I obtained several Winsor & Newton Promarker Brush markers (then called the Brushmarker), and one regular Promarker, for free at Emerald City Comicon, as some distributor or retailer gave free product to all Artist Alley artists. ![]()
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