Matt Jones
Familiar Face
- Messages
- 58
Any tips for cleaning a grosgrain ribbon?
jamespowers said:Is it sweat stained or just dirty?
Snrbfshn said:I've gotten less tentative with the Scout dark hat cleaner, and use it for the entire hat. And rather than a light foam, I slather the stuff on both the felt and the ribbon, almost to the point of soaking the hat. I then rub and dab it off using a clean, damp white cloth. I repeat the process several times if it's a just-acquired hat. I use the cloth rather than a brush because I think the brush just redistributes the dirt evenly across the hat.
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Schott 568 Vandals Jacket - $1,250 The classic Perfecto motorcycle jacket, in a very special limited-edition Schott double rider style. fedoralover said:Did you clean the entire ribbon? I've found that you can't "spot" clean on hats or ribbons very well as then the one spot will look different than the rest. So you have to clean the entire ribbon or hat all at once and then when it dries it will all look the same.
Matt Jones said:I've seen pleated ones, but are there any online sources for plain old flat grosgrain ribbons?
The only way is to remove the ribbon from the hat and gently soak in warm water and a gentle/mild lingerie soap. If you spritz it you dilute the stain but spread it over a wider area. You have to be cautious with steam around a hat. Felt loves steam....ribbon and leather not so much.I have a problem that I didn’t think could even exist. I have a light brown Fepsa felt hat (Hufvud) with a very light, gray binding. It was an open crown, so, naturally, I steamed it.
Immediately, the binding got some rusty colored stains from the steam. Then I survived. Now, as the spring finally arrived, I took my hat out of storage, and after a few days I decided to steam it a little more to improve its shape. Again, it got stained from the steam.
Both Chat-GPT and Grok said the stain is likely caused by minerals (particularly iron compounds) in tap water that are carried along with the steam. “Even if the kettle was clean,” Grok says, “ordinary tap water always contains small amounts of dissolved minerals such as iron, calcium, and magnesium.”
I never knew this could ever happen. All I ever have seen is people having fun with molding felt with steam. Am I the only one? Grok found examples of people having troubles with their steam irons, that’s all.
Well, yesterday I was in such a hurry to clean the stains right away that I forgot to take a photo. The stained part looked disastrous.
How did I survive? In October, I tried a 50/50 mixture of vodka and distilled water. No help. So, I tried a mild mixture of distilled water and spot remover detergent. It helped, and then the 50/50 cocktail of vodka & distilled water helped to get rid of the waterline. The same applied yesterday, although there’s still a minor mark left (no one will notice it).
I have one photo from last October after multiple attempts to clean the binding without damaging it.
My request for advice is: How should I remove such rusty stains properly from finely made grosgrain binding of very sensitive quality?
Sorry for being so wordy. The hat is a gorgeous 50X beaver hat in Fawn.
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