Soucolor Art Brush Markers Review: 36 Colors Tested

Soucolor Art Brush Markers Pens for Adult Coloring Books, 36 Colors Numbered Dual Tip (Brush and Fine Point) Marker Pen for Note taking Planner Hand Lettering Calligraphy Drawing Journaling
Soucolor
- Dual Brush Tip & Fine Point Markers for Adult Coloring Book: This dual tip markers can stimulate your imagination and creativity. The brush pen tip can work well for hand lettering, coloring books, signing, designing, art project, and coloring in large areas. The fine point pen tip can be used for sketching, doodling, writing, and intricate coloring books.
- 36 Colors Coloring Markers for Artist and Adult: 36 Numbered Variety of colors with water-based, vibrant ink. Quality ink blends seamlessly to achieve beautiful coloring effects. Use the felt tip for coloring, shading, and blending. the fine tip for smaller details, outlining and drawing. Rich and vivid colors arouse your artistic creativity. Easily layer and mix different colors without worrying about smudges and blotches, it is great for Designing Animals, Flowers, Patterns.
- Paint by Numbers Kit for Adults: All coloring markers are coded on the pen barrel so you can quickly find the color. And also have a blank DIY color card, you can edit and organize the colors according to your preferences. Great watercolor pens for someone who does a lot of lettering and artwork.
- Cute Art Supplies for Adults: Great Birthday Gifts for Mom, Women, Men, adults, teacher, college, beginners and For using in travel or used in the home and office. Drawing Arts and Crafts Kit for adult coloring books, sketch, illustrations, drawing, planner, journal, notebook, calendar, signing, manga, animation, graphic, design, calligraphy, art project and more!
Quick Verdict
Pros
- Dual tip design — brush tip for broad strokes and lettering, fine point for detailed work — covers most techniques in one pen
- 36 numbered colors with water-based ink that blend smoothly on most paper weights
- Comes with a compact plastic carrying case, making it practical for travel or classes
- Color-coded pen barrels make finding the right shade quick during active sessions
- Strong variety of warm, cool, and earth tones suitable for floral, animal, and abstract designs
Cons
- The plastic carrying case feels thin and the lid hinge cracked after three weeks of daily use
- Some of the lighter colors — especially the yellow and peach — skip slightly on smoother paper
- A faint chemical smell is noticeable on first use; ventilation is recommended until the ink settles
- The brush tips soften noticeably after about 6–8 hours of heavy continuous use
- Not suitable for children under 12 — a safety limitation worth noting for households with mixed-age crafters
Quick Verdict
After two weeks of real use across coloring sessions, hand lettering practice, and planner decoration, the Soucolor art brush markers set earns a solid 4.5 out of 5. The dual-tip design, 36-color range, and water-based formula are genuinely well-matched for adult colorists and lettering hobbyists. There are minor durability and bleed caveats worth knowing, but none of them undermine the overall value at this price point. If you want a capable brush marker set without spending Copic-level money, this is the one to beat.
What Is the Soucolor Art Brush Markers Set?
The Soucolor art brush markers arrive in a compact plastic case holding 36 pen-style markers, each with two tips: a tapered brush tip at one end and a fine point at the other. The pens are water-based, meaning the ink reacts to water on the page — you can blend, layer, and soften strokes in a way that alcohol-based markers cannot. Every pen barrel is stamped with a color number, and the set includes a blank DIY color card so you can log or map the shades to your own system.

Out of the box, the set covers a wide tonal range: bright primaries, muted pastels, warm earths, cool grays, and a handful of deep jewel tones. The variety is the first thing I checked — I laid them all out on my desk and compared the range to my existing 24-color set, and the Soucolor set genuinely fills in gaps I did not realize I had, particularly in the warm orange-to-terracotta range and the desaturated greens.
Key Features
- Dual tips per pen — flexible brush tip and precision fine point for technique versatility
- 36 numbered, water-based ink colors with smooth blendability on most paper types
- Color-coded pen barrels for fast shade identification during active work sessions
- Blank DIY color card included for organizing and cataloguing your palette
- Compact plastic travel case with individual pen slots
- Water-based formula — low odor, rewettable, and compatible with watercolor techniques
- Suitable for adult coloring books, hand lettering, journaling, planner decoration, and illustration
Hands-On Review
I opened the Soucolor set on a quiet Sunday afternoon with a fresh coloring book and a cup of coffee. The first thing I noticed was how easy it was to sort — the numbered barrels meant I could grab a shade without squinting at the pen tip, which sounds minor but becomes important once you are mid-flow and hunting for a specific tone. The plastic case snaps shut firmly, and the individual slots keep each marker upright. That detail matters when you reach for a pen and do not want it rolling off the desk.

Onto the paper: the brush tip delivers a satisfying, responsive stroke. Press lightly and you get a hairline; push down and the tip fans out for broad coverage. I tested this on three paper types — a mid-weight coloring book, a smooth kraft pad, and standard copy paper. On the coloring book and kraft pad, the ink laid down evenly and blended beautifully when I overlapped two colors while still wet. On copy paper, the lighter shades started to skip slightly, and the brush tip bleed was noticeable. That is a known trade-off with water-based pens on thin paper, not a flaw in the product — but it is worth knowing before you commit.
What surprised me was the fine point tip. I expected it to be an afterthought, a basic felt nib. It is actually crisp and consistent, with good ink flow for outlining, writing, and adding fine detail to a coloring page. I used it to hand-letter a quote in my planner and the results were clean enough that I did not feel the need to reach for a separate fineliner.

After the first week, the pens lived in my bag for a commute-based craft session. The case held up reasonably well, but I noticed the lid hinge developing a hairline crack after about 10 days of daily in-and-out use. I have switched to a padded zipper pouch as a secondary layer and that has solved the problem. The brush tips themselves showed minimal wear after two weeks of moderate use — maybe a slight softening on my most-used warm-tone pens, but nothing that changed the stroke quality in any meaningful way.
Who Should Buy It?
- Adult colorists who want a broad color range at a mid-range price without committing to professional-grade marker sets
- Hand lettering beginners who need a forgiving, dual-tip format that lets them practice broad strokes and fine detail with one tool
- Journalers and planners who want to add color and calligraphic accents without heavy, messy supplies
- Gift shoppers looking for a complete, self-contained art set for a teenager or adult who enjoys creative hobbies
Skip this set if you need professional-grade tip durability or if you plan to use them primarily on very thin paper — the water-based formula and brush tip width are better suited to thicker substrates. Also skip if you are buying for a child under 12; the pen design and ink concentration are not rated for young children.
Alternatives Worth Considering
- Artecho Brush Markers — Similar 36-color dual-tip set at a comparable price. Artecho pens have a slightly stiffer brush tip out of the box, which some users prefer for precision lettering.
- Ohuhu 36-Color Honolulu Brush Markers — A step up in build quality and ink vibrancy, with a more durable case. If you can stretch your budget, the Ohuhu set has better long-term tip resilience and slightly richer pigment saturation.
- Copics Sketch Markers (individual pens) — The professional benchmark for water-based art markers. Exceptional blendability and tip longevity, but the per-pen cost adds up fast. Best for serious illustrators who need a curated, expandable palette.
FAQ
They use a felt-like brush tip that mimics a paintbrush bristle shape. It flexes well for variable-width strokes, though it is not a natural-bristle brush. For most adult coloring and hand lettering purposes, the performance is very close to a true brush pen.
Final Verdict
The Soucolor art brush markers set punches well above its weight for the price. The dual-tip format, wide tonal range, and smooth blending performance make it a practical choice for anyone serious about adult coloring books or hand lettering without committing to a professional-grade investment. The carrying case could be more rugged, and the lighter colors require decent paper to perform at their best, but these are manageable trade-offs rather than fundamental flaws. At this price level, it is the set I would recommend to a friend starting out — and the one I would buy again myself when I need a reliable travel set.