Wolfmanjack
Practically Family
- Messages
- 547
I have done quite a lot of tinkering with my hats e.g., stretching to a larger size (I have a stretcher), re-blocking the crown (I have a hat block), replacing the ribbon, trimming the brim and re-setting it (I have a ring mold).
On the FL, I read about the great success my colleagues have had with softening a stiff hat using alcohol. Just today, on another thread, Davidson reported a great success story about softening five of his hats with denatured alcohol. See this thread.
I have also read other threads on the Lounge that show beautiful results using naphtha to clean a dirty hat.
This is my fear: It is well known that both alcohol and naphtha can utterly destroy organic materials, including leather sweatbands. Both of these chemicals dissolve away the essential fats and oils in the leather, that make it soft and supple. We’ve all seen vintage hats with sweatbands so dried and stiff that they will crumble in your hands like a dry cookie.
It is precisely this that has made me shy away from the softening methods (with alcohol) and cleaning methods (with naphtha) that I see recommended on the FL. Lexol is magical stuff, but can it completely reverse the damaging effects of these chemicals? It seems to me that soaking in alcohol or naphtha just has to shorten the life of a leather sweatband, no matter how much Lexol you slather on later.
Can anyone comment on the long-term effects of these chemicals?
On the FL, I read about the great success my colleagues have had with softening a stiff hat using alcohol. Just today, on another thread, Davidson reported a great success story about softening five of his hats with denatured alcohol. See this thread.
I have also read other threads on the Lounge that show beautiful results using naphtha to clean a dirty hat.
This is my fear: It is well known that both alcohol and naphtha can utterly destroy organic materials, including leather sweatbands. Both of these chemicals dissolve away the essential fats and oils in the leather, that make it soft and supple. We’ve all seen vintage hats with sweatbands so dried and stiff that they will crumble in your hands like a dry cookie.
It is precisely this that has made me shy away from the softening methods (with alcohol) and cleaning methods (with naphtha) that I see recommended on the FL. Lexol is magical stuff, but can it completely reverse the damaging effects of these chemicals? It seems to me that soaking in alcohol or naphtha just has to shorten the life of a leather sweatband, no matter how much Lexol you slather on later.
Can anyone comment on the long-term effects of these chemicals?