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Straws and naphtha bath?

pjt113

One of the Regulars
Messages
277
Location
Chicago
Hi Everyone,

I picked up a couple vintage straws that are pretty dirty and I was wondering if you can give straws a naphtha bath? Or to clean them up should I just use some of the white fuel on a cloth and wipe them down?

Thanks in Advance.
 

fedoracentric

Banned
Messages
1,362
Location
Streamwood, IL
I don't think that will do any good. The naptha is for fur felt, sure, but I don't think it does a thing to straw. In fact, I'd be worried it may do damage to a straw.

Can someone pitch in here and let us know for sure?
 

Seb Lucas

I'll Lock Up
Messages
7,562
Location
Australia
I remember people using lemon juice on straws to clean and to bleach. But you can't do it if there is cotton thread present, it breaks up the fiber.
 

barrowjh

One Too Many
Messages
1,398
Location
Maryville Tennessee
On page 38 of Ermatinger's 'Scientific Hat Finishing and Renovating' he talks about adding greasy panamas to light color felts for the overnight gasoline bath - stacking them on top to avoid crushing. So, the naptha / gasoline applied via dabbing cloth is probably ok, but avoid the problem with over-cleaning a spot and creating a white spot. Work the spot that is nasty, and then dab all around to give all of it a taste of gasoline - everything but the leather sweatband, of course.
 

Horace Debussy Jones

A-List Customer
Messages
416
Location
The Bowery
Gasoline?! really? That sounds a bit harsh, but I know they used to use it in some dry cleaning processes. I recently accidentally doused myself with gas at the pump when gassing my car up. Some dope left the nozzle latched open and the gas just came pouring out before I could get it into the filler on the car.
My clothes were ruined, and not really worth saving anyway and my shoes took a good hit also. Being fairly new shoes, and rather expensive, I decided to wait out the awful reeking gas fumes. My shoes took about a month or so to lose the gasoline stench. I had to put them in a fairly big cardboard box with some activated charcoal to absorb the fumes. I suppose you'd have to do the same with anything that's been soaked in gas?
 

barrowjh

One Too Many
Messages
1,398
Location
Maryville Tennessee
No, naptha / coleman white gas / toluene (any of those) are fairly 'clean' gasoline, more like what Ermatinger was dealing with 100 years ago, than anything available at a pump today. I am familiar with the coleman fuel and the smell is gone reasonably quickly with no special treatment. Not as quickly as the felt dries, but reasonably soon thereafter. I use the coleman fuel as a last step - to clean out residue of other cleaners and any malingering odors. Some people are more sensitive and say it takes 3 days, but I cannot smell it after a day, but my sensitivity to smell is fading (age). Well ventilated (outdoors) and low humidity - the smell is gone in a few hours, not even a day.
 

ingineer

One Too Many
Messages
1,088
Location
Clifton NJ
Beat me to it!

The book does not refer to modern gasoline but rather Naptha.
Think Coleman fliuld.Remember the time it was written
Still that does seem harsh.Better for grease and spot clean
Start gentle ,Brush well,then a very diluted mix of ammonia and water in a spray bottle.
If the straw is white use dilute hydrogen peroxide.
Spot test all cleaners!!!
Good luck
Richard
 

Horace Debussy Jones

A-List Customer
Messages
416
Location
The Bowery
Ahh,..ok. I getya. Naptha was referred to as gas back then. I've actually used it to clean a hat once myself. Worked quite well except that it caused the old embroidered silk liner in the hat to shatter. Got all the dirt and hair products out though without harming the felt or the sweatband.
 

LuvMyMan

I’ll Lock Up.
Messages
4,558
Location
Michigan
Not a straw hat or even a hat question.

Has anyone tried using Naphtha to clean old dirty 100% horsehair hat brushes?

Hello. I have used just regular dish soap and let them dry after lathering the brush up and rinsing the hell out of them. Seems to work fairly decent, too.
 

LuvMyMan

I’ll Lock Up.
Messages
4,558
Location
Michigan
Hi Everyone,

I picked up a couple vintage straws that are pretty dirty and I was wondering if you can give straws a naphtha bath? Or to clean them up should I just use some of the white fuel on a cloth and wipe them down?

Thanks in Advance.

Not sure where I have observed the product, I will see if I can find it and provide a link for purchasing, but there is a spray soap/cleaner for Straw and Panama hats, it works very good, leaves a clean surface, does not mess up the hat at all, will not strip off the finish of the hat, and has no "gas" sort of chemicals in the ingredients. Not an expert, Daniel used this product a few years ago on a straw hat he has, it worked really nice. One element you have to think about as that straw is not as "hardy" a material as a felt/beaver/rabbit hat. Some straw perhaps would suffer a damage to it, is you used the wrong "cleaning" substance on it.

Bickmore does make a straw hat cleaner, but the cleaner Daniel used was not Bickmore. If I am not mistaken, it was not cheap but worked really well. Spray it on, let it sit for about 10 minutes, take the hat outside, shake the extra wetness off, wipe the hat dry. Used a new white wash clothe on the hat and you could see the buildup of dirt and sort of a "film" come right off. Hopefully I can find this product, we just do not recall at the moment what it was or where it was sold, seems maybe eBay?
 

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