Fedora
Vendor
- Messages
- 828
- Location
- Mississippi
I'm just upset with the custom dress hat maker who know about the makeup of western hats though truly knows little of what went into making the dress hats' like they made in the 20's through 50's.
Kind sir, please enlighten the ignorant dress hatters. Since most of those dress hatters never made cowboy hats(you generally work the felt differently on stiff hats), they know little of making a fine cowboy hat. I am very interested in learning how to properly make a dress hat. Do we all need to get together and show up at your house, so you can show us?
I just don't like the buffalo customers into a belief mentality that many hatters took in the past when they themselrves were learning that dress hat felt is different than cowboy hat felt.
We need specifics here. Are you saying dress hatters do not know the difference between dress felt and western felt? That is absurd. Even a non hatter such as yourself knows the difference. Back up your insults with some facts and proof to your assertions. You are slinging arrows here, that have no tips.
Much of the problem i find with hatters today is that they learn little to nothing about dress hat felts... and when they try to make dress hats which are from our perspective the soft fedora and the homburg, they end up using the wrong materials and making the wrong claims regarding wear.
The problem lies not with the hatter, but the supplier. There is a difference here, and everyone should realize that difference. Do not confuse the hatter with the feltmaker.
There is a difference in the felt content and density and thickness that is needed for the hat to take the wear of being soft and pliable and still be able to bounce back into shape and not wear right out. The mixes of furs in the softer hats allow for these traits. different beavers and hairs and nutria.
A little knowledge is dangerous. Blends can be used for any hat, dress or western. The reason is nothing more than pricing. Nothing more. Do not create mis-information regarding certain blends being used for certain hats. You are doing this board a great dis-service by promoting invalid ideas. The ultimate fur for any hat is beaver. If you want a hat that shares characteristics with beaver hats, but is cheaper to make and sell, thereby serving a market for a lower priced hat, you use other furs,(cheaper) and add enough beaver to the blend to get the desired result. There is not a magical felt that happens when you combine furs. Instead, you can make a very good, economical felt by blending. You can sell it at a price that will meet particular market demands, at least this is the way it was in the old days. Do not forget that when John B. Stetson first went into business, he shocked the established hat companies by using more beaver and nutria in his hats than was common at the time. To the other hatters, it was nonsensical, adding that great fur, as they could produce hats without it, although inferior hats.
You leave yourself wide open by your statements Matt. Your assertions can not be documented, as they are nothing more than your own opinion. Facts that hatters know as a matter of course roll off your back like water off a duck's back. Now that is about the most ridiculous thing about this. In my neck of the woods, we call that stupidity. I just hope folks who are honestly interested in the truth of felt and hats, will look farther and not just accept your statements, or mine. Fedora