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Stetson most expensive hat

Messages
10,524
Location
DnD Ranch, Cherokee County, GA
From Stetson Facebook Posting...
STETSON FACT: in 1954, a $1,500 hat took a year to be created by 43 skilled workers dubbed "the world's most expensive hat" and was kept in a hand-tooled leather case (stewardess is sitting on the case below). The band was made of sterling silver fashioned into a double strand of rope adorned with a solid gold longhorn steer.

This hat would cost about $13,020.67 to make today.
 

buler

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,375
Location
Wisconsin
I posted some newspaper articles on this somewhere. Can't seem to find them. Here is a picture RLK posted in the Stetson Stuff thread....

5032629469_6da3592b44_b.jpg
 

buler

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,375
Location
Wisconsin
Found them further down in the Stetson Stuff thread....

August 20, 1954:

stetson_8_20_54_us.jpg


August 31, 1954:

stetson_8_31_54.jpg


Two from Sept 15, 1955:

stetson_9_15_55.jpg


stetson_9_15_55b.jpg
[/QUOTE]
 

TheDane

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,670
Location
Copenhagen, Denmark
What a great story! Oh, would I love to rest a hand on that rodent? :rolleyes:

Wonder why it took 43 skilled workers a whole year, though. 43 man-years of work was hardly the case - but it's good marketing copy :)

Anyway, all details are doubtlessly half past perfectly executed, and the felt probably feels like angel-dusted baby curls!
 
Messages
10,524
Location
DnD Ranch, Cherokee County, GA
I can see 43 workers being involved if you start with the fur selection to make the felt body.
For the year of time, back in the day felt bodies were allowed to age for long periods of time before being worked up into a finished hat.
Given stories from current day custom hatters, I am sure they didn't do just 1 felt blank in case of a slip-up along the way...
 

TheDane

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,670
Location
Copenhagen, Denmark
@gtdean48: Sure - not to mention resting periods between the different stages in the blocking/finishing process - and it may very likely have been through more than one blocking. The sentence will probably create different images on the personal Technicolor, if the reciever knows about hat production or not, though ;)
 

Walt

One of the Regulars
Messages
269
Location
Idaho
So does anyone know if any have ever shown up on ebay/other auction sites or in a museum or for that matter has anyone every seen one of these in person?

Wondering who the oil men/cattle barons were who bought these! That was a heck of a lot of money back then!
 

RossRYoung

Practically Family
Messages
902
ISO:
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Thought I’d bump this thread with (from what I’ve found) the largest hat Stetson ever made. CB at that, 10” crown and 7” would make me think this would be a contender (less the blingy hatband and case above) for most expensive as well. Really would be nice to get better pics of this extraordinary western.
 

Yahoody

One Too Many
Messages
1,110
Location
Great Basin
Sam Colt, PT Barnum, JB Stetson are classic examples. "The pubic will believe anything if you write it down and tell then the same story enough times."

The original "fake news".
 
Messages
17,587
Sam Colt, PT Barnum, JB Stetson are classic examples. "The pubic will believe anything if you write it down and tell then the same story enough times."

The original "fake news".
Who knows? The Sterling Silver double strand rope hatband with the Sterling Silver Longhorn on the hat at the top of this thread, could have been an Edward H. Bohlin, a Tiffany or some other famous Silversmith of the day. That would add to the expense & cost of the hat tremendously.
 

Yahoody

One Too Many
Messages
1,110
Location
Great Basin
Ah, hu :)

I wasn't thinking it was the hat band. Silver and gold obviously upped the price more than the hat was worth. It was the "it took 43 skilled workers a whole year" that I find to be nonsense.
 
Messages
17,587
Ah, hu :)

I wasn't thinking it was the hat band. Silver and gold obviously upped the price more than the hat was worth. It was the "it took 43 skilled workers a whole year" that I find to be nonsense.
Stands to reason if Stetson was going to make a "show piece" destined for very few target sales they would have used a silversmith like Bohlin.

I couldn't find a pic of the original Tony Lama gator El Rey's with the diamonds & gold. They were said to be valued at $100,000 when they were stolen. Here are pics of the most recent version from 2011; the El Rey IV, with gold said to be valued at $50,000. It's all the same principal.

IMG_0858.JPG


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Yahoody

One Too Many
Messages
1,110
Location
Great Basin
Of course there is a butt for every saddle.

Bowlin's work which sold for less than $1000 recently.
8774044_4.jpg


Fritch Brothers Silversmiths
3/8" Sterling Silver (22 Gauge thickness) Handcrafted Hatband with Sterling Silver Buckle set (20 Gauge) with 10K Gold Floral Overlays and lab grown Rubies, Adjustable to fit any hat. $995.

A3SSR-256x256.jpg
 
Messages
17,587
Of course there is a butt for every saddle.

Bowlin's work which sold for less than $1000 recently.
8774044_4.jpg


Fritch Brothers Silversmiths
3/8" Sterling Silver (22 Gauge thickness) Handcrafted Hatband with Sterling Silver Buckle set (20 Gauge) with 10K Gold Floral Overlays and lab grown Rubies, Adjustable to fit any hat. $995.

A3SSR-256x256.jpg
Can you imagine the price of this bottle of Guerrillero Tequila Reposado if the braid & wind string were braided Sterling Silver rope?

IMG_0903.JPG


IMG_0907.JPG


IMG_0906.JPG


IMG_0908.JPG
 
Messages
18,941
Location
Central California
Ah, hu :)

I wasn't thinking it was the hat band. Silver and gold obviously upped the price more than the hat was worth. It was the "it took 43 skilled workers a whole year" that I find to be nonsense.


Certainly not if they were working on just those hats full time. However, if you said it took a master craftsman (let’s say Bob at BSHW), three years to make your hat you could also been referring to the time it took for your hat to come up in his queue rather than three years of nonstop work on the hat. I could also see the start to finish time being a year of waiting for components (silver work etc.). Taking a year with it going through 43 hands sometime within that year seems possible. This is why we have lawyers who take 50 pages to say what should normally take a paragraph: you’ve got to make sure everyone understands the words to mean the same things.
 

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