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How to repair a fedora's brim?

EstherWeis

Vendor
Messages
2,615
Location
Antwerp
You can just wet it a little and put a cloth on the brim and iron it flat. No high heat.

I have never experienced any shrinking with my felts so I would be highly surprised if you would have.
It will flatten out in no time. Just let it dry naturally on a flat surface.

And I wouldn’t advise you to use a starch stiffener.
 

johnnycanuck

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,005
Location
Alberta
Make one yourself. Its made with 1/8" hardboard, same as pegboard but without holes. A flat base layer. Thin u-shaped piece for spacing. Then a top piece that has the cut out of it for the hat crown. I cut the hardboard with a jig saw. Used my hat as a guide for the shapes. Used a staple gun to secure it together. I will take pictures of mine when I get home so you can see what I mean.
Johnny
 

scottyrocks

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,161
Location
Isle of Langerhan, NY
When a brim gets wonky I use either water from a spray bottle or steam on it, put the hat on my head, and then smooth the brim front to back with my hands on the bottom side of the brim. I vary pressure and location by sliding front to back, and edge to crown until I get a shape I like.

Water gives more time to get what I want, but steam evaps quicker and lets the felt more quickly hold the shape I just forced it into. Lately I've been using steam more than water, and working quickly, sometimes re-steaming if the results are not pleasing to me.

This method works especially well on raw edged brims, which is what you seem to have there.
 

RJR

Messages
10,620
Location
Iowa
When a brim gets wonky I use either water from a spray bottle or steam on it, put the hat on my head, and then smooth the brim front to back with my hands on the bottom side of the brim. I vary pressure and location by sliding front to back, and edge to crown until I get a shape I like.

Water gives more time to get what I want, but steam evaps quicker and lets the felt more quickly hold the shape I just forced it into. Lately I've been using steam more than water, and working quickly, sometimes re-steaming if the results are not pleasing to me.

This method works especially well on raw edged brims, which is what you seem to have there.
+1
 

glider

A-List Customer
Messages
389
I tried some Bickmore hat stiffener on a fedora, worked really well . I like that you can adjust how stiff you want your hat by how many times you spray it with the stiffener. I just sprayed it once and it's just stiff enough to hold it's shape . It's available on amazon.
 
Messages
12,384
Location
Albany Oregon
I personally avoid steam. Cool water does just fine for me and has very little risk or shrinkage. I would get the brim wet, towel dry, place it on a flat surface and put heavy books on the brim. Leave it for a day to dry naturally. If you want to maintain the flatness of a brim you may want to buy/make a "Scout Hat Press" do a google search and you will see what I am talking about. I have one for my scout hat but have used it for "new to me" hats I want to knock out its original shape.
hope that helps
Johnny
+1
 

Willybob

A-List Customer
Messages
367
I have re blocked many shrunken rabbit hats. I flatten a brim by spraying it with distilled water , cover it with a piece of white t-shirt material Ive cut to fit over the crown, and use an iron that I don't put water in. water stored in an iron can produce rust over time. I use the cotton setting. It is best to do so on a hard smooth surface that can handle the heat covered by another piece of old t-shirt larger than the brim, not a padded ironing board. Too much flex. The concern with high heat is that you can burn the felt, but the t-shirt material resolves that issue. Ive never found high heat to be determental when not directly on the felt. I have ironed directly on the felt before but I scub the iron face clean first and never iron on dry felt.
 

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