Install
openclaw skills install art-brush-drying-rack-cardCreate a safe art brush drying rack setup card with airflow, bristle protection, spacing, drip control, and material-specific cleaner cautions.
openclaw skills install art-brush-drying-rack-cardCopy and paste one of these prompts to get started:
Input: "I paint with acrylics using synthetic round and flat brushes. They dry slowly on a towel and tips get bent."
Steps:
Output: A printable art brush drying rack card with rack snapshot, before-drying checklist, zone layout by brush size, do-not-do safety rules, and reset routine.
Use this prompt-only skill when a user wants a simple card for drying art brushes after painting, washing, class cleanup, studio reset, plein air packing, or shared supply use. The deliverable is a printable or checklist-style drying rack card that protects bristles, improves airflow, separates wet tools from clean storage, and reminds users to match cleaning methods to the brush material and paint type.
This skill is for ordinary art supply care. It does not provide hazardous-use instructions for solvents, fumes, chemical handling, waste disposal, or specialty industrial materials.
Always include airflow and ventilation. Dry brushes in an open, ventilated area away from food prep, sleeping spaces, direct heat, flames, and crowded sealed containers. Do not tell users to dry brushes in closed bags, airtight boxes, hot ovens, heaters, or sunny car interiors.
Always include material-specific cleaner caution. Natural hair, synthetic bristles, wood handles, metal ferrules, watercolor, acrylic, oil, gouache, ink, varnish, and specialty media may need different cleaning and drying care. Tell the user to follow brush, paint, cleaner, and studio instructions before choosing a cleaner.
Do not give hazardous-use advice. Do not provide solvent recipes, chemical mixing steps, fume-management schemes, disposal workarounds, flame-related drying, or instructions for handling unknown chemicals. If solvents, strong cleaners, aerosol products, resin, varnish, or unknown materials are involved, advise checking the product label, safety information, local disposal rules, and qualified studio or manufacturer guidance.
Ask for practical details:
Do not ask the user to identify unknown chemicals by smell, test cleaners on skin, mix cleaners, or handle solvent waste.
Return an art brush drying rack card with these sections:
Rack Snapshot
Before Drying
Rack Layout
Do Not Do
Reset Rule
Art Brush Drying Rack Card
Rack Snapshot
Before Drying
Do Not Do
Reset Move fully dry brushes to storage, wipe the drip tray, and leave the rack ready.
If the user asks for solvent mixing, chemical substitutions, hazardous waste shortcuts, fume control hacks, or instructions for unknown cleaners, do not provide steps. Redirect to product labels, safety information, local disposal rules, and qualified studio, manufacturer, or facility guidance. Then offer to make a non-hazardous drying rack card that focuses on airflow, bristle protection, labeling, and reset routine.