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Possible?

brothelcreeper

Familiar Face
Messages
51
Location
Sydney
Would I be able to shape one of these:
520388998_o.jpg

http://www.ebay.com.au/itm/Optimo-C...-/261090798721?pt=US_Hats&hash=item3cca396c81

Into something similar to this:
Screen-shot-2011-03-29-at-11.37.57-PM.png


If so, any tips on how to make a pug? I'm guessing it's pretty easy to figure out but maybe you guys can provide something a little more.

Cheers
 

Rabbit

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,561
Location
Germany
For puggaree ribbons, see the pics here and further down.

The Optimo shape of the Panama in the 1st pic can be reblocked to a porkpie shape as seen in Sinatra's Milan. If you're careful not to crack the straw, you might be able to re-shape it by hand, using steam to loosen up the fibers.

Porkpie Panamas are rather unusual, but it's certainly possible to do it.
 

rlk

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,100
Location
Evanston, IL
If you had the block, and the result would be an extremely low crown as the telescoping uses up a sizeable amount of material.
 

danofarlington

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,122
Location
Arlington, Virginia
That's not a bad quality Panama, already in its intended shape. Myself, I would be reluctant to porkpie that one. I'm sure it could be done, but I'm not sure that a porkpie is a good use of such a Panama body--too elegant for a porkpie shape. If I were into porkpies, I wouldn't make a fine beaver hat into one, for example, because it's a use of an elegant material into sort of a frivolous shape. It's up to you, naturally, but you could find another porkpie already made to suit. A milan hat probably looks better in a porkpie IMHO.
 

m0nk

One Too Many
Messages
1,004
Location
Camp Hill, Pa
Personally, I would leave the optimo style in tact. They're nice hats and would retain a good value over time, should you ever want to get rid of it. Once you alter something like that, the value would likely drop considerably. JMO.
 
Messages
15,026
Location
Buffalo, NY
As Robert points out, you would wind up with a very short hat.

Ebay often has a good selection of 50s milans in this style and they generally come with the pug.
 
Messages
10,627
Location
My mother's basement
A hatter with the right block and flange (which is hardly a given, considering the style not only has to be right, but the size as well) could turn much of that panama's brim material into crown material and produce a hat with proportions quite similar to the Sinatra lid. It wouldn't be easy, but it could be done.

But, as Ed and Alan already said, the Sinatra hat is a milan, and those babes come up on eBay frequently enough. I like your chances of finding such a hat there better than finding that hypothetical hatter with the block and flange (and willingness) to convert that panama.
 
Last edited:

Edward

Bartender
Messages
24,812
Location
London, UK
I'd wait and look for a straw porkpie in a Milano weave. Easily found (personally, I prefer a modern polystraw body in that style, as they're much more resistant to rain). IMO, the porkpie shape works best with a body that has a little more rigidity to it - panamas have too much "give" to look quite right to me in that form. JMO.
 
Messages
10,627
Location
My mother's basement
I believe these blocks Mike picked up in Florida are what gives the shape you are after.

...

Yes, it illustrates a point we find ourselves making over and over again ...

Straw hat blocks aren't the same as felt hat blocks. Straw hat blocks are shaped -- pinches, creases, whatever the particulars-- and that shape is pressed into the straw material with corresponding pieces called "tippers," whereas felt hats are blocked (and pounced and lured, etc.) on open crown blocks. (In mass-production factory settings, felt hats typically get their crown shapes stamped into them -- with shaped blocks -- after the other bodyworking processes are completed, but that's a whole 'nother discussion.)

The repertoire of a hatter working in straws is limited by his blocks -- the styles, the sizes. A good friend who specializes in straws has amassed a quite impressive collection of blocks and is always on the prowl for others. He often finds those blocks in rough condition, and usually without the tippers, so off to the woodworking specialist they go for repairs (it's amazing what that guy can do with those old chunks of wood) and to have new tippers made. It's all quite costly and time-consuming.
 

danofarlington

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,122
Location
Arlington, Virginia
Shaping in a hat is really important to me. I am a big admirer of Borsalino shapes, whether on felt hats or Panamas. Their shapes are in my opinion some of the best, if not the best, out there. This can be illustrated when they go out of shape. I have yet to meet a hat repairer who can equal the magic shape of a Borsalino after the hat has been pushed in or otherwise out of shape. So on my Borsalinos, I try very hard not to ever let them get out of shape--I baby them. Once you lose their original shape, a Borsalino hat is just a hat. I think their designers are craftsmen of the highest order. This might also apply to other hatmakers, but I would fear re-shaping a men's dress Stetson, for example, much less than re-doing a Borsalino. Yes, you can make the shape similar, but not the same magic way it was.
 

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