Very interesting Miracle Felt... looks to be another experiment from the 1940s when materials were scarce and many men were forced to wear a different hat overseas. Looking forward to more photos.
Pushed the button on the two of these. I'm actually fairly surprised no one else bid on the second one, which appeared to be NOS.
Indeed, though this late-'50s Vagabond is from a different marketing push...
Brad
:yo:
Brad, a tip of the hat to you and the wealth of knowledge that you add here.
indeed, though this late-'50s vagabond is from a different marketing push. The dobbs and knox miracle felts from 1957-1959 all featured a layer of nylon sandwiched between two layers of fur felt to make a lightweight but resilient hat, hence their advertising of being crushable. Hat corporation of america had a couple of patents on this type of felt, which could use any number of natural or manmade fibers in the middle of the sandwich. The first patent (filed in 1942, received in 1944) was for a traditional blown-in hat cone, though they did file on a patent in 1959 (received in 1964) for something similar, only this felt is needle-felted into a flat sheet and later molded into a hat shape, not blown into a cone and roll-felted with water. A molded crown doesn't seem as conducive to being a crushable hat, so these later knox and dobbs hats were probably made all using the '44 patent. I have yet to see a cavanagh miracle felt, if any existed. My cavanagh cavorter features the same kind of sweatband, so maybe it could be the miracle felt without the name. I don't want to slice into it to find out.
I'm glad these experiments are being conserved by folks!
Brad
Nice finds John - that Stetson looks good.
LoveMyHats2 - You're a lucky man - My wife doesn't use ebay (which is probably a good thing in case she watched my expenditure). Lovely hat.
If anyone can tell me anything about these two, I'd be grateful!