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Felt hat basics

Bourne ID

One of the Regulars
Messages
271
Location
Electric City, PA
Thanks Matt, this is why we come to the Lounge! I really appreciate all the knowledge that you share here. I find myself digging through threads looking for your posts, always something to be gained.
 

danofarlington

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,122
Location
Arlington, Virginia
Thanks for the video! You're a natural in front of the camera, Matt. I really enjoyed it.

Off-topic: Do you happen to be in SF or the SF Bay Area in March or early April? I'd very much like to bespeak a suit.

If you were afraid of a custom-made suit, would you be "bespooked?'' Just an idle question.
 

scottyrocks

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,161
Location
Isle of Langerhan, NY
If you were afraid of a custom-made suit, would you be "bespooked?'' Just an idle question.

Jaguar%20Tachometer%20001%20Night.jpg
 

furfeltfettish

New in Town
Messages
27
Location
Austin
hat cleaning and refurb

After looking a various websites and reading a book on Stetson hat making, I decided to try a method suggested but not often spoken of. Pardon me, if this offends the purists on here, but this worked well for me. I occasionally purchase felt hats that have deep moth bites or bad stains and smudges, and you can only do so much with a hat brush and sponge. I decided to try this method on my old stetson 3x fedora that is far from mint, a daily driver. There was a bad moth bite on the front of the crown that was really bugging me--no pun intended. So I got the finest grain of sand paper that I could find, and stroking with the knap as I would with a brush, I went over the bite taking off a very thin layer of felt. The bite is now barely noticable and the felt looks normal, not sanded. I have used this method on stubborn stains with great success as well, often with just a few light strokes necessary to remove the offending mark.
have any of you tried this?
 

Alan-Eby

Familiar Face
Messages
96
Location
Western New Mexico
I had a couple old western hats given to me by a friend of my grandfather, they were pretty beat up and dirty so not knowing anything about anything I asked my Mum how to clean felt. My Mum doesn't know about hats, but has made a lot of stuff out of felt. She said sand it, so I did. Those old hats now look like new hats and get many compliments.
 

jimmy the lid

I'll Lock Up
Messages
5,647
Location
USA
Thanks for the compliments... Videos were John In Covina's idea. I've just finally got around to doing one.
The hat is a prototype I had made up, same one as in my current avatar.

The basic point of the video is simple enough -- namely, rest a soft fedora on its brim and not the crown. Meanwhile, throughout the video, you continuously commit a huge hat crime by handling the fedora by the crown -- specifically, by the pinch. Over time, that takes more of a toll on a hat than storing it on its crown...;)
 
Last edited:

Bourne ID

One of the Regulars
Messages
271
Location
Electric City, PA
The basic point of the video is simple enough -- namely, rest a soft fedora on its brim and not the crown. Meanwhile, throughout the video, you continuously commit a huge hat crime by handling the fedora by the crown -- specifically, by the pinch. Over time, that takes more of a toll on a hat than storing it on its crown...;)
you know...I was thinking about that handling method. I'll bet you any amount that this is exactly how we got the pinched front, top creased fedora that we all know so well. Think about it..the derby and bowler came first but removing a hat by the brim doesn't work so well and so men reached for the crown. Every time they grabbed it they creased it and one day a gentleman said to himself "that looks mighty fine just like that". And there you go..the fedora was born. Or maybe it was the stetson cowboy hats with the extra wide brim that would have made it even harder to remove so the boys reached up for the crown. I do try to remember to not pinch my crown but it is easier to get the hat off that way. I've ruined a few straws that way though.
 

DRB

One Too Many
Messages
1,621
Location
Florida
Using two hands to place and displace your hat is the least stressful method on the hat.
 

Yeps

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,456
Location
Philly
you know...I was thinking about that handling method. I'll bet you any amount that this is exactly how we got the pinched front, top creased fedora that we all know so well. Think about it..the derby and bowler came first but removing a hat by the brim doesn't work so well and so men reached for the crown....

Well, I really doubt it came from the derby, since those are stiff hats, and grabbing them by the crown just won't work. However, I tend to agree with you on the general idea. Maybe it came from people grabbing center creased hats by the crown.
 

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