St.Ignatz
Call Me a Cab
- Messages
- 2,444
- Location
- On the banks of the Karakung.
What do you use to revitalize a sweat band?
St.Ignatz said:What do you use to revitalize a sweat band?
Wil Tam said:make sure you place some paper toweling around the inside of the sweat before you use any cleaning or conditioning product ... I like Lexol neatsfoots to soften up hard brittle leather, leave it on overnight then check pliability then repeat if necessary .. then condition it.
J.J. Gittes said:I use Lexol. I have a question though, does grease from your hair dry out the sweat and cause it to crack? I would think the opposite.
Woodfluter said:I tear off strips of aluminum foil, wider than the sweatband by a comfortable margin, and slip that behind the sweat. Then there's absolutely no possibility of getting anything on the lining or anything seeping through paper towels, etc.
You can even use a little conditioner on the underside of the sweat band (with great care and in moderation) if you do that. Not usually required, but I've done it with two hats that had leather in rather brittle condition.
I hear Lexol is great. A retired chemist friend that worked for the company that developed it confirms that it really is extraordinary. I've never had any. Have used mink oil (the real stuff without drying additives) in small doses and no problems thus far. You can heat the sweatband gently with a hair dryer to get it to absorb quicker. That's all I know!
- Bill
pauljmuk said:yeah, sure, but....
a) plenty on hear about the best way to break / shrink a hat in is to give it a good sweat - surely WANTING the sweat to get in there
b) as an aussie bush hat wearer - of the classic mould - surely the cattleman is out there in high heat, high humidity and high action - are they really wiping brows that often?
This all sounds like form over function, and I thought class working style akubras based themselves on function over form?