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Cleaning Straw Hats

Visigoth

A-List Customer
Messages
458
Location
Rome
Not a lot on the FL about cleaning straw. Can you soak a Milan straw hat in water and Woolite? (And reshape it afterwards?)

I did find this advice on ebay:

98. Cleaning Straw Hats With Oxalic Acid.—Hats made of milan, hemp, panama, and rough straw braids in natural colors may be cleaned by using a weak solution of oxalic acid.

To prepare an oxalic solution sufficiently strong for a badly sunburnt hat, dissolve 1 tablespoonful of oxalic acid in 1 pint of water, a process that will require from 15 to 20 minutes. When the acid is dissolved completely, pour 1 teaspoonful of the solution on a clean pine board. If it foams, or forms bubbles, it is too strong and should be weakened. Add more water and test the solution again. As soon as it fails to foam, it is of the correct strength.

99. While cleaning a hat by this method, do not put the hands in the acid solution. Use a small white-bristle scrubbing brush and scrub the hat quickly, beginning at the center of the crown and rubbing around and around until the side crown is reached; then continue around the side crown and on to the brim, rubbing the brush in a circle and in the same direction all the time.

Rinse the straw quickly with clean water, using the same brush for this purpose. Place the hat in the air or in the sunlight so that it will dry. The work must be done quickly in order that the straw may not become too damp and puff up. When the hat is perfectly dry, press it into shape under a damp cloth, using a hot iron. The ironing board used for this purpose should be heavily padded and the pressing should be done very lightly; otherwise, the imprint of the iron will flatten the straw. The damp cloth used should be lintless, if possible.

100. Cleaning Men's Straw Hats With Salts of Lemon.—Straw hats may be cleaned in a solution of 1 tablespoonful of salts of lemon to 1/2 pint of water. Dissolve by boiling, and after the solution cools apply to the hat with a firm brush, starting at the top. Dry with a soft cloth. Do not allow this cleaner to touch the sweat band, as it will harden the leather.
 
Messages
10,603
Location
My mother's basement
Hoo boy. I don't know that I'd be willing to practice any of those techniques on a good straw hat. Thanks for posting 'em, Visigoth, but I have visions of ruining a hat in a hurry if I ever tried 'em without a pro looking over my shoulder every step of the way.
A few days ago I Googled "panama hat cleaning" and got a bunch of advice, some it at odds with others. So yeah, I'd like to get the straight dope from someone who has actually cleaned several hundred straw hats, and learn from his hard-earned experience. If I were told by a trusted person, "don't even try it," well, I wouldn't try it. But then, SOMEBODY knows how it's properly done, and that person wasn't born with the knowledge and skill, so ...
 

Smithy

I'll Lock Up
Messages
5,139
Location
Norway
Just after some advice...

I have a lovely old Panama hat that I purchased in Santiago a few years ago. Over that time it's been through a few travels and adventures and needs a bit of a clean, mostly due to some small sweat stains (it's been worn in hot climes so I suppose that's not surprising). Just wondering if anyone can offer the best way to clean the old girl up. I was about to attack it with soapy water but thought I'd check with the experts first.

Cheers,

Tim.
 

Empyrium

One of the Regulars
Messages
175
Location
Land of the Rising Sun
Cleaning Straw Hats With Oxalic Acid.—Hats made of milan, hemp, panama, and rough straw braids in natural colors may be cleaned by using a weak solution of oxalic acid.

To prepare an oxalic solution sufficiently strong for a badly sunburnt hat, dissolve 1 tablespoonful of oxalic acid in 1 pint of water, a process that will require from 15 to 20 minutes. When the acid is dissolved completely, pour 1 teaspoonful of the solution on a clean pine board. If it foams, or forms bubbles, it is too strong and should be weakened. Add more water and test the solution again. As soon as it fails to foam, it is of the correct strength.

Link to original page.

Someone here must have a more simple and useful way to clean it ;)
 

Flieger

Practically Family
Messages
570
Location
Umea, Sweden
Smithy: When I bought my Pachacuti I was reccomended to use a wet wipe to clean it with. It's still new so I haven't had reason to try it yet.

Flieger
 

Smithy

I'll Lock Up
Messages
5,139
Location
Norway
Thanks Empyrium for the process although to be honest it sounds like an awful hoofluff - more akin to alchemy :D

And thanks for the tip Flieger, although I think mine might need something a little stronger (it's seen a bit of action)!
 

Feraud

Bartender
Messages
17,190
Location
Hardlucksville, NY
I would hold off using Oxalic Acid on a panama unless someone provides results of this treatment.

This acid suggestion reads more like a metal treatment than a natural fiber one and can possibly set the stain rather than remove it.
 

dhermann1

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,154
Location
Da Bronx, NY, USA
How about repairing?

I've seen another thread that says basically that anyone spending money to repair a Panama should just invest the money in a new one. I've put some nice holes in mine by grabbing it by the pinch too much over the 4 years I've owned it. If I'd only had FL sooner!
Any opinions?
 

Feraud

Bartender
Messages
17,190
Location
Hardlucksville, NY
dhermann1 said:
I've seen another thread that says basically that anyone spending money to repair a Panama should just invest the money in a new one. I've put some nice holes in mine by grabbing it by the pinch too much over the 4 years I've owned it. If I'd only had FL sooner!
Any opinions?
Depending on factors like sentimental value of the hat, repair and shipping costs, etc. investing in a new Panama in particular cases is not a bad idea.
 

moehawk

I'll Lock Up
Messages
5,669
Location
Northern California
Resurrecting a zombie thread....:)

Last night, unable to sleep, I decided to play with one of my parabuntals that I am in the process of converting into men's styles. I was working on the lighter colored one, trying to put an overwelt edge on the part of the brim I was planning on trimming off anyway. I was using a piece of millinery wire I had cut off the brim of a different hat as a curve to fold the straw over to get a smooth line. After weighting down the straw to dry in place, I finally fell asleep. When I woke up and went to see how the technique worked, my heart sank to my shoes. The wire, which I thought was stainless, had left dark lines where it had been in contact with the straw. Looked like ballpoint pen lines. Most was on the part to be trimmed, but a loose end left a 3" line right through the middle of the top of the brim. I first dabbed at it with water, to no avail. Alcohol wouldn't touch it, and Goof-Off just smeared it around a little. I was deciding on whether to make it a stingy or the top half of a Dualist-style lid when I remembered using Barkeeper's Friend cleanser to get rust stains out of a pair of linen pants, so I figured I didn't have anything to lose by trying it. Made a thin slurry, dabbed it on the stain, trying not to get too much of the abrasives on the straw. Let it sit a few minutes, rinsed well in warm water and it was gone. I was a bit distraught to remember to take a before pic when it happened, so an after pic would be meaningless. It worked that well. Barkeeper's Friend contais oxalic acid, so when I google searched the Lounge for the right thread to post this in, I wasn't too surprised to see oxalic acid mentioned already.
Well, folks, I can attest to it's effectiveness, and without damage to the straw, as best I can tell.
 
Messages
10,476
Location
Boston area
I purchased oxalic acid at the pharmacy. Also great to run through the dishwasher, or anything that iron oxide (rust) has stained, including quartz crystals. But be careful, and dilute.
 

moehawk

I'll Lock Up
Messages
5,669
Location
Northern California
Upon drying, I must admit there was a slight aftereffect...a noticably cleaner spot where the BKF was applied. I might have to pick up some oxalic acid and do the whole thing.
 

Richard Morgan

One Too Many
Messages
1,642
Location
Central Tesxas
I recently got an old Penny's Panama that had definitely seen better days, very dirty and the sweat was pretty much gone. I found this thread with @moehawk's tip about cleaning straw with oxalic acid. I found the oxalic acid at a paint store (the big box stores didn't have it) and set to work. I usually forget to take before pics but did this time.
IMG_8202.JPG IMG_8202.JPG IMG_8203.JPG These are the before, with the pug removed. I don't have pics of cleaning the pug but the big surprise was that the pleats in the pug were not stitched, just ironed. As soon as I started washing it in a weak solution of Woolite it turned into just a wide strip of cloth. Fortunately I was able to use the fading to line it all up to be reironed. It's not perfect but pretty close to the original.
IMG_8207.JPG This is the brand of oxalic acid I found. I sure any paint store would have it. I used a tablespoon in a pint of water and tested it on an unpainted piece of pine. The solution didn't bubble up so I was good to go. I probably could have made it a little stronger but this worked. I used a toothbrush to brush the mixture on in small circles starting at the brim. This took 15 minutes or so and I didn't see any sign of the straw swelling from absorbing too much liquid. I then used a sponge and clean water to wipe the mixture off. There is no way to tell if you have removed it all so be thorough.
After drying overnight this is what it looked like.
IMG_8209.JPG IMG_8210.JPG IMG_8211.JPG After some steam and ironing the brim to get the wrinkles out, putting in a new vented sweat from @bond and replacing the pug, this is the end result. IMG_8310[1].jpg IMG_8312.JPG IMG_8313.JPG
 

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