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Bristle - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bristle

Bristle
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A bristle is a stiff hair or feather (natural or artificial), either on an animal, such as a pig, or on a tool such as
a brush or broom.

Varieties
Synthetic materials such as nylon are also used to make bristles in items such as brooms and sweepers. Bristles
are often used to make brushes for cleaning purposes, as they are strongly abrasive; common examples include
the toothbrush and toilet brush. The bristle brush and the scrub brush[1] are common household cleaning tools,
often used to remove dirt or grease from pots and pans. Bristles are also used on brushes other than for cleaning,
notably paintbrushes.
Bristles are distinguished as flagged (split, bushy ends) or unflagged; these are also known as flocked or
unflocked bristles.[2] In cleaning applications, flagged bristles are suited for dry cleaning (due to picking up dust
better than unflagged), and unflagged suited for wet cleaning (due to flagged ends becoming dirty and matted
when wet).[3] In painting, flagged bristles yield more even application.[4]

Variations of bristle in the animal kingdom


Bristles are found on pig breeds, instead of fur. Because the density is less than with fur, pigs are vulnerable to
sunburn. One breed, the Tamworth pig, is endowed with a very dense bristle structure such that sunburn damage
to skin is minimized. Animals named for their bristles include bristlebirds, the bristle-thighed curlew, the
bristle-spined porcupine, and the Trinity bristle snail. Bristles also anchor worms to the soil to help the worm
move.

See also
Hairbrush

References
1. http://www.walmart.com/c/ep/scrub-brushes
2. Cleaning Spot Catalogue 2013, p. 25 (https://books.google.com/books?id=4PWZOIojvZEC&pg=PA25&
dq=flagged+bristles)
3. Tech Tip: Flagged vs. Unflagged Broom Bristles (http://blog.nelsonjameson.com/tech-tip-flagged-vs-unflaggedbroom-bristles)
4. Old-House Journal, May 1986, p. 171 (https://books.google.com/books?id=oPdI4Ss9kYkC&pg=PA171&
dq=flagged+bristles)

External links
Types of Bristle Materials Used for Brushes (http://www.gordonbrush.com/material_descriptions.php)

5/2/2016 8:17 AM

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