Fed in a Fedora
Practically Family
- Messages
- 739
- Location
- Dixie, USA
I've only cleaned one hat with Coleman fuel, and it was stripped of sweat and lining. I had good results. While I have never tried it, what the Fed said regarding the acidic nature made me think - I've seen some on here who've cleaned their hats with Woolite, as well. Since Woolite (soap) is alkaline, it may counteract the acidic nature of the "offending substance."
Could I try the coleman fuel on the hat first and if that doesn't work, try the woolite, or would the stain be set in if it has not already? Also, I noticed Fed said since it is acidic, it could cause discoloration of the hat. Could the spots just be discoloration and not stains? They are darker than the rest of the hat, not lighter. Lastly, do I put woolite on a wet rag and just scrub?
When in doubt, send it out. If you want to try and clean a hat using any of these methods, you may want to practice on some old beaters first.
I wear weatern hats pretty much all day long every day even in summer. I have gotten all manner of things horses and cattle have coughed up on them by steaming one of those hat wiping sponges (orange large cell ones) and then brushing the spot vigorously. If the vomit has oil in it then talcum powder will absorb that part well if left on it for days. I have a 100% beaver silver belly hat that got gearbox oil on it when I reached up for a container on a shelf and grabbed it and it cracked and got the stinky oil on the hat. I did several cycles of talc on both sides of the brim on that spot and the hat now has lots of sweat oil stain around flange but that gear oil smell is not there and there is no evidence of any dirt having collected on the spot the gear oil soaked into.
I have not naptha bathed a hat but I agree that Naptha is an oil solvent but I would not expect it to deal with water soluble stains.