Also, pick a brush with nice stiff bristles for this. A stiff boars hair will be way more effective at breaking the fibers apart than a soft horse hair. Then the alternating circlular motion will hopefully twist those newly loosened fibers back together. You can go back to a softer brush for...
Hopefully someone will correct me if I'm giving "bad" advice here as a noob. I think you can fix those "cracks" rather easily with a bit of wet brushing.
First brush off as much dirt and whatnot as you can. Then spritz with water and brush in circles where it's wet, alternating the direction...
Rub a stick of beeswax over the leather wherever it will touch your skin. Just tacky enough that you won't suddenly start losing your hat with every gust of wind. Way less aggressive traction, that won't occasionally feel like removing a bandaid.
If a hat lacks a size tag, how would you determine if it is regular, long, wide, extra long oval?
And I guess the same question for a head. Any way to measure it instead of trying on a bunch of stiff new hats?
That has been my experience, but with the added frustrating twist that "anything I haven't used in a while, I will remember exactly where to find, right up until the moment I need it. At that point it will certainly be lost amongst all the other things I didn't throw away. And as soon as said...
Interesting. A failed search for the referenced thread brought up a lot of negative comments about Febreeze. I had no idea there were so many people with such a hatred for it.
I have an aversion to fragrances only when they are much too strong. E.g. it makes me nauseous standing next to...
The perfumes are a secondary addition to the primary ingredient that makes Febreeze what it is. Unfortunately, I don't think they offer it with none (and no idea what that chemical smells like on its own).
Seems like, with as large a variety of fragrances as they offer now, you could find one...
Replying to a very old post here, but I think it's worth mentioning:
If your only problem is the smell of smoke, you should be able to simply spray the hat with Febreeze, instead of dunking it in solvents. The discovery of the primary active ingredient of Febreeze as a "cleaning" product came...
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