BRUSHES & COMBS

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    Brushes & Combs – Essential Coat Care Tools

    Brushes & combs are the backbone of coat care—lifting loose hair, clearing tangles, and setting a clean lay before clipping or scissoring. The right tool for the coat type shortens prep time, protects skin, and leaves a smoother, healthier finish.

    What brushes & combs do

    • De-shed and de-tangle efficiently, removing undercoat and knots without excessive breakage.
    • Stimulate skin and distribute natural oils for shine while checking for mats, parasites, or hotspots.
    • Create a uniform, lifted coat that improves clipper glide and scissor accuracy.

    Consistent, section-by-section grooming prevents painful mats and keeps coats breathable between appointments.

    Key types & where they shine

    • Slicker brushes – fine, angled pins for line-brushing curly, wool, and double coats; cushioned pads to reduce skin stress.
    • Pin & bristle brushes – pin for medium–long coats to maintain volume; bristle for short coats to polish and spread oils.
    • Rakes & undercoat tools – single/double-row teeth that pull loose undercoat from double-coated breeds.
    • Dematting/coat breakers – safety-edged blades to split stubborn mats (use sparingly, finish with slicker/comb).
    • Greyhound & finishing combs – coarse/fine sides to locate snags, set parts, and verify a truly tangle-free coat.
    • Flea & face combs – ultra-fine teeth for eye corners, beards, and flea detection around the tail head.

    How to groom efficiently (line-brushing workflow)

    1. Mist a light, coat-safe detangler to reduce static and breakage.
    2. Lift a thin “line” of coat with your free hand; work the slicker from skin to tips in short strokes.
    3. Move section by section from belly upward, then shoulders to rump; re-mist as needed.
    4. Switch to a comb—if the comb passes smoothly from roots to ends, the section is finished.
    5. End with a full-length comb-through and blow-out (if drying) to set lay for clipping or scissoring.

    Light pressure, small sections, and frequent resets beat heavy-handed, wide passes every time.

    How to choose the right tools

    • Coat type – curly/wool: soft-pad slicker + finishing comb; double coat: rake + slicker; smooth coat: bristle/palm brush.
    • Dog size & density – wider heads for large breeds, compact heads for faces/feet; longer pins for dense coats.
    • Skin sensitivity – cushioned pads, rounded pins, and anti-static sprays for delicate skin.
    • Build quality – rust-safe teeth, secure pin set, ergonomic grips, and flexible pads to reduce wrist fatigue.
    • Hygiene – easy-clean designs and disinfectant-tolerant materials for salon turnover.

    Care & maintenance

    • Remove hair after each use; wash with mild detergent, rinse, and air-dry bristle/pin heads.
    • Disinfect combs and metal tools between pets; avoid soaking cushioned slickers—use spray and wipe.
    • Retire bent pins, loose teeth, or cracked pads to prevent skin scratches and coat damage.

    Important notes

    • Never brush dry, brittle coat aggressively—use a light mist to cut friction.
    • Support skin with your free hand over thin areas (ears, armpits, groin) to prevent abrasions.
    • Severe matting near the skin may require professional dematting or humane clip-off for comfort.

    Build a brushes & combs kit around coat type and density: a quality slicker, a correctly sized rake, and a reliable finishing comb. With good technique and clean tools, you’ll reduce shedding, prevent mats, and deliver a polished, scissor-ready coat every time.

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