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Allow me to join the chorus, David. It's a real sharp hat. Wear it and you'll grow accustomed to the look of it, I'd bet, and then you'll come to think those other lids look kinda small.
The relationship between the brim size and the crown heightDavid Bresch said:Staying calm and absolutely neutral, can someone translate this criticism of the "too tall hat" (I receive these messages frequently by private email):
"David that hat is about an inch too tall for the brim to work with it. It also
is just made on the wrong block as well but that is common with now a days hatters as they simply do not invest in a good selection of blocks even if
Gee, who is still smarting because his poor pouncing wasDavid Bresch said:is just made on the wrong block as well but that is common with now a days hatters as they simply do not invest in a good selection of blocks even if they do know what block makes what style. Regardless the entire hat needs made over is the first cure for it and if it was blocked on a proper block and then pounced since it is not pounced now and finished into a real hat it is a nice color. As it is you have the equivalent of a 2 hour hat and its just a raw body that resembles a hat and was never finished as well as being all wrong. Not sure that comes out correctly in my words but its all accurate at least regardless or how the tone is accepted here.
Did the writer stop to explain to you the difference betweenDavid Bresch said:He has used about a 5 ¾ - 6 inch 52 Block when a 51 should have been used for this style hat. Then he cut the brim down so that is should have been blocked at least ¾ inch lower. Its really all a hideous mess that has never made it past a Brillo pad finish and is not pounced nor sealed."
David, I hope you are simply being used by someone whoDavid Bresch said:Note that by a small margin I prefer the construction of my Art Fawcett hats to the others. But I am dying to understand what this all means...
David Bresch said:Staying calm and absolutely neutral, can someone translate this criticism of the "too tall hat" (I receive these messages frequently by private email):
"David that hat is about an inch too tall for the brim to work with it. It also is just made on the wrong block as well but that is common with now a days hatters as they simply do not invest in a good selection of blocks even if they do know what block makes what style. Regardless the entire hat needs made over is the first cure for it and if it was blocked on a proper block and then pounced since it is not pounced now and finished into a real hat it is a nice color. As it is you have the equivalent of a 2 hour hat and its just a raw body that resembles a hat and was never finished as well as being all wrong. Not sure that comes out correctly in my words but its all accurate at least regardless or how the tone is accepted here.
He has used about a 5 ¾ - 6 inch 52 Block when a 51 should have been used for this style hat. Then he cut the brim down so that is should have been blocked at least ¾ inch lower. Its really all a hideous mess that has never made it past a Brillo pad finish and is not pounced nor sealed."
Note that by a small margin I prefer the construction of my Art Fawcett hats to the others. But I am dying to understand what this all means...