Want to buy or sell something? Check the classifieds
  • The Fedora Lounge is supported in part by commission earning affiliate links sitewide. Please support us by using them. You may learn more here.

Dyeing a Hat

Messages
10,391
Location
vancouver, canada
Yes, this is what I used on the felt. I used a half strength black dye as I wanted a mid grey. It came out a mid grey with lots of nice blue tones in it. As the water has to be hot (just below the boil) the felt will continue to felt up on you becoming denser and smaller. It should be a raw felt not an existing hat with the leather sweat installed. The hot water will destroy the leather sweat.
 

Deeeluxe Definitely

One of the Regulars
Messages
121
Six weeks ago, I asked if anyone here had tried dying a hat with hair color. Since nobody "fessed up," I decided to conduct my own experiments, on two prime candidates. The first was a "silverbelly" Stetson cowboy hat which had been worked in till nearly worn out. (I couldn't read the number of x's in the sweatband.) After two washings, it was still badly stained.

P1040214.jpg


I used Revlon ($2.97) brown-black. Here's the result. It's still a "beater," but
a better one, now.

P1040229.jpg


The second was a "stingy brim." I had pirated its sweatband and ribbon, some time ago. I don't remember the brand, but it is thin, dense, high quality fur felt, although badly faded. (Note the darker felt, which had been under the sweatband.)

P1040224.jpg


Here's what it looks like after dying (brown-black), and adding a wide black ribbon and bow, with an inset grey-brown ribbon.

P1040230.jpg


I learned a few practical departures from the instructions:
(1) Remove both the sweatband and the ribbon, before dying. They will take
dye, but you want color under them.
(2) When you mix the two parts of the color, add an equal volume of water.
This will make the paste thinner and easier to use on a hat. It will also
make enough to do two hats, at one time.
(3) Don't use the conditioner! It will lighten the color, and make it uneven.
In hair, this is called "highlights, but you don't want "highlights in a hat.

And here they are on a live model:

P1040235.jpg


P1040242.jpg
This is astounding! How did you apply the dye?

I am attempting to make an old black hat a richer, blacker black. I'm definitely trying to avoid hot water (I don't want to ruin my crease or remove the sweatband particularly). A cold water rinse and dry off in air conditioning should make this feasible.

Because it's already nearly black, I don't really need the inside dyed. The ribbon is already detached and the liner is missing.

I was considering leather dye as someone suggested in another topic, but I don't know if that will leave a sticky residue or not.
 
Messages
18,936
Location
Central California
This is astounding! How did you apply the dye?

I am attempting to make an old black hat a richer, blacker black. I'm definitely trying to avoid hot water (I don't want to ruin my crease or remove the sweatband particularly). A cold water rinse and dry off in air conditioning should make this feasible.

Because it's already nearly black, I don't really need the inside dyed. The ribbon is already detached and the liner is missing.

I was considering leather dye as someone suggested in another topic, but I don't know if that will leave a sticky residue or not.


You’re responding to a post from a guy who hasn’t been seen here in 12 years. I think J. T. went west.
 

M Brown

A-List Customer
Messages
335
Location
N Tx
wow...this may be the oldestthread I've ever come across on any forum...
from 2007...
but since I'm here I'll add that I once dyed a Beaver Brand 5x silverbelly felt hat with day old coffee.
I removed the liner and ribbon hat band and soaked it it a big tupperware bucket of coffee. When it had sat for a day It came out of the coffee in it's original cone felt shape. So I went thru the reshaping process with an old wooden hat block and some wooden spatulas and spoons, raised the crown a bit, which narrowed the brim a bit, strung it tight, and let it dry. When the dust had settled I steamed a new pinch, and added a new matching ribbon band to it. To my surprise, it dried to more of a tan than coffee color, but it turned out great. In fact, it's the hat I'm wearing in my avatar.
 
Messages
10,391
Location
vancouver, canada
wow...this may be the oldestthread I've ever come across on any forum...
from 2007...
but since I'm here I'll add that I once dyed a Beaver Brand 5x silverbelly felt hat with day old coffee.
I removed the liner and ribbon hat band and soaked it it a big tupperware bucket of coffee. When it had sat for a day It came out of the coffee in it's original cone felt shape. So I went thru the reshaping process with an old wooden hat block and some wooden spatulas and spoons, raised the crown a bit, which narrowed the brim a bit, strung it tight, and let it dry. When the dust had settled I steamed a new pinch, and added a new matching ribbon band to it. To my surprise, it dried to more of a tan than coffee color, but it turned out great. In fact, it's the hat I'm wearing in my avatar.
I betcha it smelled great......like breakfast!!!
 

Forum statistics

Threads
107,263
Messages
3,032,476
Members
52,721
Latest member
twiceadaysana
Top