Original: $57.99
-65%$57.99
$20.30The Story
Kuchelmeister MultiBrush is a pre-built dubbing brush designed to speed up bodies, collars, and heads on streamers, saltwater patterns, and steelhead flies. Each brush blends complementary fibers and flash on a wire core, giving you an instant, repeatable profile with minimal bulk. It’s purpose-built for palmering forward and trimming to shape, so you can go from bare hook to finished silhouette in a few wraps.
Available in multiple widths and densities, MultiBrush covers everything from sparse shrimp carapaces to meaty baitfish shoulders. The fibers are long enough to stack and taper with scissors, yet they’re easy to comb back between turns, which keeps the profile open and prevents the matting you get from over-dubbed loops. If you like composite loops but want the speed and consistency of a factory blend, this hits the sweet spot.
How to Use It
Anchor the wire core just ahead of the point where you want the body or head to start, add a small drop of gel CA or resin to lock the tie-in, then palmer forward with light, even tension. After each turn, use your off-hand or a brush to sweep fibers rearward so they don’t get trapped. Two to four wraps usually create a full shoulder; more than that can crowd the eye. Tie off, secure with thread wraps, and trim to shape—flat on the bottom for keeling, wedge-shaped for a pushy head, or rounded for a balanced profile.
Pick the brush width to match the fly’s scale. Narrow brushes (around “small” widths) shine on shrimp, sculpins, and trout streamers; mid-widths build intruder shoulders and baitfish heads; the widest versions are ideal for musky, pike, and offshore patterns. Blend color transitions by alternating half-wraps of two brushes, and use a marker to add barring once the head is shaped. A light steam or water pinch resets fibers if you over-trim.
Brush-Head Deceiver: Tie a classic bucktail and saddle tail on a 1/0–3/0 saltwater hook, then build the head with 2–3 wraps of a mid-width MultiBrush in a two-tone baitfish blend (e.g., olive over pearl). Comb each wrap back, tie off 3–4 mm behind the eye, and trim into a tapered wedge so it pushes water without becoming a waterlogged blob. Add stick-on eyes and a thin resin veil. This keeps a long, clean profile for stripers and bluefish while shedding water for easier casting.
Intruder Shoulder (Swing Flies): On a 40 mm shank with a size 2–4 stinger hook, create a rear station, then add 1–2 wraps of a narrow MultiBrush as the shoulder ahead of ostrich or rhea. The brush props the soft materials, preventing collapse in heavy flows and maintaining a presentable silhouette at low swing speeds. Finish with a cone or 5–7 mm dumbbells to find the depth window on winter steelhead runs.
Brushy Shrimp: For bonefish or redfish on size 2–6 hooks, tie bead-chain or light lead eyes slightly forward of center, then palmer a narrow tan brush from the bend to the eyes. Trim flat on the bottom to keel, keep the top rounded, and add barred rubber legs. The result is a quick, durable body with subtle flash that lands softly in knee-deep flats and rides hook-up over turtle grass.
Why We Like It
It’s fast, consistent, and versatile. MultiBrush delivers a proportional, repeatable body or head in a few wraps, so you spend more time fishing and less time building composite loops. The pre-balanced fiber/flash blends create translucency without overloading the fly, and the wire core stands up to toothy fish and hard fishing days.
Control is excellent: you can vary density by spacing wraps, fine-tune action by how you trim, and easily blend colors for lifelike gradients. It’s a simple way to get modern streamer shapes—pushy heads, propped shoulders, and clean silhouettes—without the learning curve of complex material stacks.
Comparable Materials
Enrico Puglisi EP Brushes offer ultra-soft translucency and come in many widths; they excel for subtle baitfish and shrimp, while Kuchelmeister MultiBrush tends to build slightly crisper structure that trims neatly into pushy heads. Hareline Magnum Flash Brush is flash-forward and stiffer; great for big, bright profiles, but if you want a more natural taper with less bling, MultiBrush is easier to sculpt. Just Add H2O Sculpting Flash Brush is very supple and sinks with minimal drag; MultiBrush gives comparable speed with a bit more shape retention. Semperfli Predator-style brushes push the long-fiber, large-fly niche; MultiBrush covers that space but also hits mid-size trout and steelhead patterns without overpowering the hook.
Description
Kuchelmeister MultiBrush is a pre-built dubbing brush designed to speed up bodies, collars, and heads on streamers, saltwater patterns, and steelhead flies. Each brush blends complementary fibers and flash on a wire core, giving you an instant, repeatable profile with minimal bulk. It’s purpose-built for palmering forward and trimming to shape, so you can go from bare hook to finished silhouette in a few wraps.
Available in multiple widths and densities, MultiBrush covers everything from sparse shrimp carapaces to meaty baitfish shoulders. The fibers are long enough to stack and taper with scissors, yet they’re easy to comb back between turns, which keeps the profile open and prevents the matting you get from over-dubbed loops. If you like composite loops but want the speed and consistency of a factory blend, this hits the sweet spot.
How to Use It
Anchor the wire core just ahead of the point where you want the body or head to start, add a small drop of gel CA or resin to lock the tie-in, then palmer forward with light, even tension. After each turn, use your off-hand or a brush to sweep fibers rearward so they don’t get trapped. Two to four wraps usually create a full shoulder; more than that can crowd the eye. Tie off, secure with thread wraps, and trim to shape—flat on the bottom for keeling, wedge-shaped for a pushy head, or rounded for a balanced profile.
Pick the brush width to match the fly’s scale. Narrow brushes (around “small” widths) shine on shrimp, sculpins, and trout streamers; mid-widths build intruder shoulders and baitfish heads; the widest versions are ideal for musky, pike, and offshore patterns. Blend color transitions by alternating half-wraps of two brushes, and use a marker to add barring once the head is shaped. A light steam or water pinch resets fibers if you over-trim.
Brush-Head Deceiver: Tie a classic bucktail and saddle tail on a 1/0–3/0 saltwater hook, then build the head with 2–3 wraps of a mid-width MultiBrush in a two-tone baitfish blend (e.g., olive over pearl). Comb each wrap back, tie off 3–4 mm behind the eye, and trim into a tapered wedge so it pushes water without becoming a waterlogged blob. Add stick-on eyes and a thin resin veil. This keeps a long, clean profile for stripers and bluefish while shedding water for easier casting.
Intruder Shoulder (Swing Flies): On a 40 mm shank with a size 2–4 stinger hook, create a rear station, then add 1–2 wraps of a narrow MultiBrush as the shoulder ahead of ostrich or rhea. The brush props the soft materials, preventing collapse in heavy flows and maintaining a presentable silhouette at low swing speeds. Finish with a cone or 5–7 mm dumbbells to find the depth window on winter steelhead runs.
Brushy Shrimp: For bonefish or redfish on size 2–6 hooks, tie bead-chain or light lead eyes slightly forward of center, then palmer a narrow tan brush from the bend to the eyes. Trim flat on the bottom to keel, keep the top rounded, and add barred rubber legs. The result is a quick, durable body with subtle flash that lands softly in knee-deep flats and rides hook-up over turtle grass.
Why We Like It
It’s fast, consistent, and versatile. MultiBrush delivers a proportional, repeatable body or head in a few wraps, so you spend more time fishing and less time building composite loops. The pre-balanced fiber/flash blends create translucency without overloading the fly, and the wire core stands up to toothy fish and hard fishing days.
Control is excellent: you can vary density by spacing wraps, fine-tune action by how you trim, and easily blend colors for lifelike gradients. It’s a simple way to get modern streamer shapes—pushy heads, propped shoulders, and clean silhouettes—without the learning curve of complex material stacks.
Comparable Materials
Enrico Puglisi EP Brushes offer ultra-soft translucency and come in many widths; they excel for subtle baitfish and shrimp, while Kuchelmeister MultiBrush tends to build slightly crisper structure that trims neatly into pushy heads. Hareline Magnum Flash Brush is flash-forward and stiffer; great for big, bright profiles, but if you want a more natural taper with less bling, MultiBrush is easier to sculpt. Just Add H2O Sculpting Flash Brush is very supple and sinks with minimal drag; MultiBrush gives comparable speed with a bit more shape retention. Semperfli Predator-style brushes push the long-fiber, large-fly niche; MultiBrush covers that space but also hits mid-size trout and steelhead patterns without overpowering the hook.



















