Want to buy or sell something? Check the classifieds
  • The Fedora Lounge is supported in part by commission earning affiliate links sitewide. Please support us by using them. You may learn more here.
Messages
10,847
Location
vancouver, canada
Hello! I'm new here but I've lurked a long time. I thought I would post my question here before I make a whole new thread.

So I buy pre1960s hats whenever I see them. Because of my budget, I usually pick them up at thrift shops where they aren't in great condition and no one really knows or cares that they're vintage. Sometimes I will find ones in great condition, but for my latest finds, they are pretty dirty. Long story short: how do you clean vintage hats? Especially felt hats?

I've strip cleaned dresses before, but I really don't want to ruin the hats lol...

Thank you for your help!
Felt is a wonderfully resilient fabric. It is hard to ruin it so don't feel you have to be precious with it. To fully clean a filthy hat it needs to be stripped down to just the felt. You can wash it in a low Ph cleaner like Orvis paste. Or give it a full naptha bath to get out the difficult grease stains.. But then rebuilding the hat requires hat making tools and that is where it gets complicated and pricey. For your needs a good hand held steamer and hat brush will help clean and refresh the hat. Caution: Don't hit the leather sweat directly with the steam....it will curl it like cheap bacon. Have fun with the process.
 
Last edited:

tamz0r

Familiar Face
Messages
80
There’s a hat on ebay im interested in and i have a question about reshaping the brim. looks like the previous owner curled up the very ends of the brim on the sides and may or may not have removing the cupping/flange on the front and back.

if i were to get this hat, would i be able to modify the brim to its original state without any special tools… that is to say, remove the curls on the sides and give it back a flange all around? pictures attached. TIA!
 

Attachments

  • C5738282-91D1-4AC8-B382-C134E02EEAA5.jpeg
    C5738282-91D1-4AC8-B382-C134E02EEAA5.jpeg
    530.4 KB · Views: 117
  • 2571A844-629E-41B8-8CC0-CED8E77C5F8F.jpeg
    2571A844-629E-41B8-8CC0-CED8E77C5F8F.jpeg
    498.2 KB · Views: 91
Last edited:

jlee562

I'll Lock Up
Messages
5,103
Location
San Francisco, CA
There’s a hat on ebay im interested in and i have a question about reshaping the brim. looks like the previous owner curled up the very ends of the brim on the sides and may or may not have removing the cupping/flange on the front and back.

if i were to get this hat, would i be able to modify the brim to its original state without any special tools… that is to say, remove the curls on the sides and give it back a flange all around? pictures attached. TIA!
I'm leaning towards no. I think you could probably manage to remove the upturns on the side, but I would be less confident that you could get it back to factory fresh without a flange....unless you want a flat brim. I've handled one or two of those 4x hats and they weren't great as far as shaping goes.
 

Granville

One of the Regulars
Messages
214
Location
Long Beach, NY
I've seen vintage hats being sold as "wool" but there's no wool symbol on the sweat. Can I trust it's really fur felt, or would a manufacturer in the sixties put the required wool "stamp" on a piece of paper (that has since disappeared)?
 
Messages
11,713
I've seen vintage hats being sold as "wool" but there's no wool symbol on the sweat. Can I trust it's really fur felt, or would a manufacturer in the sixties put the required wool "stamp" on a piece of paper (that has since disappeared)?
It has mostly been my experience with vintage and modern for that matter that wool hats in the US have wool indicated somewhere on the label, sweat or liner. I imagine mainly because of the requirements.

In A case where maybe a label was removed… you can often see other quality clues that may help. Usually you don’t see higher quality sweats and ribbon treatments On the usually cheaper wool hats.
 

skylize

New in Town
Messages
30
Used a pretty thin oil in treating my sweatband, and it bled onto the ribbon.

Any good ideas for removing or evenly spreading the darkened coloration and the obviously-oily feel without removing the ribbon to wash/replace it?
 
Messages
10,847
Location
vancouver, canada
Used a pretty thin oil in treating my sweatband, and it bled onto the ribbon.

Any good ideas for removing or evenly spreading the darkened coloration and the obviously-oily feel without removing the ribbon to wash/replace it?
Almost impossible. The oil has to go somewhere. You may be able to disburse it somewhat with a spritz of denatured alcohol. But stains on ribbons are hard to remove without removing them. If you try to spot clean most often you just keep chasing the stain around the ribbon. In order to clean it you need to wash it and flush the stain away....lots of water or alcohol/naptha for oily stains. I only use conditioners like Lexol and in very very small amounts and even then only on vintage leather that has seen better days. Unless your sweat is particularly acidic I don't find it is necessary.
If you detach the ribbon in a methodical way and note how it is sewn on it is not that difficult to take it off, clean it and resew. But with oil there is no guarantee it will clean up well.
 

Steve1857

I'll Lock Up
Messages
8,857
Location
Denmark
Sorry if this has been asked before, can't find it, but.... Can someone describe 'antelope' furfelt finish to me, please? I can find photos, but other than comparisons made to 'suede', I can't quite figure it out. Is it rougher than 'standard' furfelt, or....?
Not rougher at all, Edward. On the contrary, it's one of the smoothest felts in my opinion.
 
Messages
19,001
Location
Central California
Sorry if this has been asked before, can't find it, but.... Can someone describe 'antelope' furfelt finish to me, please? I can find photos, but other than comparisons made to 'suede', I can't quite figure it out. Is it rougher than 'standard' furfelt, or....?


It’s mostly called suede finish these days. It can be incredibly soft. The nap of the furs are longer than a bald finish, but not as long as a velour finish. You’ll also see it spelled “antilope.”

Steve @mayserwegener can answer detailed questions regarding production methods etc.
 
Messages
17,511
Location
Maryland
Sorry if this has been asked before, can't find it, but.... Can someone describe 'antelope' furfelt finish to me, please? I can find photos, but other than comparisons made to 'suede', I can't quite figure it out. Is it rougher than 'standard' furfelt, or....?

This is a translation from "Der Hut", (2009) by Gustav Menschel who was Technical director of the Ebreichsdorfer Fur Felt Hat Factory (closed 1971) formerly S.&J. Fraenkel Wien, Ebreichsdorf, Lower Austria.

"The terms suede, antelope, moleskin, chamois and velo suede refer to felts with a peach skin finish. The surface, which consists of a short 0.1-0.3 mm long layer of hair, is produced on high-speed effect rubbing machines. Since the rubbing work penetrates deep into the stump - you lose about a quarter of the thickness of the felt - correspondingly high weights are necessary (a 25 cm stump (for a man's hat) ~ 145 g). The quality of the effect primarily depends on the rubbing, the hair mixture, fulling and coloring also play a role that should not be underestimated. Today's mixtures consist mainly of tame rabbits, sometimes with portions of wild rabbits, and hardly ever of pure wild rabbits and hare hair. Stumps that are firmly milled at the core result in a beautiful, even fabric appearance.

First you work the stiffened and shaped stump on the luster machine with coarse paper down to the core layer. The sandpaper tears fibers out of the felt, breaks them up, evens out any small bumps in the stump and thus prepares an even sanding base. Then the dust is removed and the stump shaped into a hat. The actual suede effect is created with P 220 quality sandpaper on effect rubbing machines. The processing starts at the bottom, continues at the top and finally extends to the head. Depending on the quality, this requires several such rubbing tours. The resulting friction dust is removed by vacuuming, brushing out on the touring stick or on the luster machine. To increase the shine, the brushes of the luster machine, which are covered with long-haired goat or horse hair, can be lightly greased. With accordingly Equipped automatic edge and head rubbing machines, antelope effects can be produced inexpensively."

If you want to see the machines mentioned I can post photos. I have a good amount information (production, historical) on such finishes.
 
Last edited:

Forum statistics

Threads
109,238
Messages
3,077,008
Members
54,183
Latest member
UrbanGraveDave
Top