rlk
I'll Lock Up
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Very-very informative. ( There being so little literature of vintage text on hats ) What is especially interesting is the pictures that also illustrate the dimensions of the different hat models.
What is also interesting ( for me anyway ) are the terms and phrases used - long forgotten now. Very educational.
This all goes to show that good hats are where it's at. Especially the felt.
A certain lightweight - heavy felt was available. In shop finishes. The lot.
Basically a guy could walk into the hatter - order his hat from the block - A hat body would be selected and then worked on. A raw or felted edge given - pouncing. The option to have the liner glued or stitched.
This is a very interesting fact that I have learned recently. In the Uk there were a chain of Hatters by the name of Dunn & Co. Who eventually became menswear specialists' also. Some of you may have heard of them, they went bust in the mid-ninties.
They had a model called the hurricane. Which had a standard 2 1/2 brim and 5 1/2 Crown. They mass produced this hat blocked to the store. The customer then picked the hat chose what finishes he wanted in store and then the hat went into the back to be finished. I have a picture of such a room that I will post, called a blocking room - it has a hot bath in the centre with blocking done in various stages around it. The customer would then come back the same day or the morning after and pick up their finished hat.
All of this was of course done by hand as it pre dated the automation of hats in the UK which happened in the late 50's. What I liked abouth this was the walk in aspect of it. The hatter was a real person you spoke to, who had experience and could advise you well face to face. There ARE many members whos knowledge far surpasses mine, but this sort of literature is invaluable.
Well done for posting!!!
Gumbo.
An interesting aspect of these articles is the dating; 1928. Seems that hats were already on the way out long before JFK.