Quote from: Annah on September 23, 2012, 12:37:57 PM
My first brush set was MAC. I remember spending 35-50 dollars on one Brush. It seemed that MAC was the unofficial transgender brush brand and everyone and their mother was telling me to get these. Being new at everything, I obliged.
Four months later I was giving a set of brushes from Sephora as a Christmas Gift. The entire set was 15 dollars cheaper than one MAC Brush.
After trying both, I saw absolutely no difference whatsoever in the quality and the results of my makeup. None. No one else noticed either
To get on a Geek Level, buying a MAC brush is like buying an Alienware computer. For a $4500 Alienware computer with the same specs/hardware/cpu...virtual carbon copy you can get the same PC for 1500 dollars with a different brand.
You're spending gobs of money just on a name. Nothing more. My current brushes are even made from the exact same fiber and fiber consistency of a MAC brush.
Not sure of the transgender association with MAC? Ru Paul was a MAC spokeperson a few years back, but he is not TG? I know many drag queens that are MAC fans, but not sure of the TG implication otherwise. And as far as being overpriced, if you check around at most of the other major cosmetic brands, MAC brush prices are very much average in today's marketplace.
Anywho, if you are buying natural hair (sable, goat, and squirrel hair) brushes at the prices you mention, great. But I'd check again, as they more than likely are synthetic, or are made of a different type of animal hair. Also synthetic brushes aren't bad, many high end brushes like Hourglass for example are synthetic, but even among synthetic brushes, there can be a world of difference can exist.
If someone wants to save some $$$, checkout
www.sigmabeauty.com. These are about the lowest price/quality ratio brush I'd recommend. There maybe others out there, but I've tried most every brand of brush out there.