Brushes differ greatly in terms of size, texture, material, and cost. The brush hair chosen depends on one's needs at the moment; certain kinds of brushes are more suited to certain
script styles and individuals than others. •
Handle: usually of bamboo, exotic brushes may instead use such materials as gold, silver, jade, ivory,
red sandalwood or
spotted bamboo. •
Hair source: normally the brush is made from goat,
Siberian weasel (, yellow-rat-wolf), pig, mouse,
buffalo, wolf, or rabbit hair, while exotic ones can be made from tiger,
fowl, deer, and even human hair (from a baby's first haircut, said to bring good fortune while taking the
imperial examinations). •
Hair texture: soft (), mixed (), or hard hair (). •
Hair size: generally classified as either big (, ), medium (, ), or small (, ); most calligraphy is written with a medium-sized brush. The smallest brushes are used for very small pieces and for fashioning designs for seals. While medium size brushes are the most widely used, wielded by a skilled artist a medium brush can produce a variety of thicknesses of line from very thin to fairly thick. The largest brushes are used only for very large pieces. •
Hair length: generally classified by hair length for thickness of handle as either long (), medium (), short (); most calligraphy is written with a medium-length hair brush. The long hair brush are more keep to hold an ink than the short hair brushes as their length. So, it used for continuous long or short stroke line scripting such as Japanese traditional
hiragana style by
renmen (). The hair of long hair brushes tend to be made by hard texture hair to keep their hair form, but there is a not one. Japanese very long and slender hair brushes called
menso-burushes () are used for detail painting. Synthetic hair is not traditionally used. Prices vary greatly depending on the quality of the brush; cheap brushes cost less than one US dollar while expensive brushes can cost more than a thousand dollars. Currently, the finest brushes are made in the town of
Shanlian, in the
Nanxun District,
prefecture-level city of
Huzhou, of
Zhejiang province. ==History==