Brad Bowers
I'll Lock Up
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Most Knapp-Felt hats Derbies and top hats I've seen from 1900-1915 were advertised as Argentine Nutria or Clear Argentine Nutria.
Brad
Brad
Most Knapp-Felt hats Derbies and top hats I've seen from 1900-1915 were advertised as Argentine Nutria or Clear Argentine Nutria.
Brad
WHOA!!!!! That topper is just purely incredible!! The condition is unbelievable, and the craftsmanship is top notch all the way. You wear the hat extremely well, Alan. Bravo!!! :eusa_clap:eusa_clap:eusa_clap:eusa_clap:eusa_clap:eusa_clap:eusa_clap:eusa_clap
So the Nutria used on these C & K top hats is not just in the brim, the material on the crown is a longhair Nutria? That was fairly uncommon wasn't it? I always thought that since the 1850's, Top Hats stopped using beaver in favor of a "longhair" Silk because the beaver population in America was decreased tremendously. So C & K used nutria instead of that "longhair" silk?
I've never before heard of "Argentine" nutria! Fascinating!
It's an assumption that they are indeed using Nutria for the fur content instead of silk plush, but I think it's a safe assumption. I'm guessing Nutria was a more cost-effective alternative, at least for C&K.
Beaver were trapped nearly to extinction in North America by 1830, and thus higher prices might have helped along the switch to silk, but it was really the fickleness of European fashion that spurred the change. Silk became far more desirable in a hat to the public, and with the ability to efficiently create the hatter's plush out of it, the fashion took off. It was that change in fashion that prevented the complete extinction of the beaver in North America. The "beaver bubble" of inflated prices burst around 1830 with the new interest in silk, and the trapping trade in the U.S. died out. Most "mountain men" found other lines of work around the American West, or moved back east.
Brad