Mario
I'll Lock Up
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- Little Istanbul, Berlin, Germany
Neophyte said:I think he meantin the
sense of the word, rather than
in the
sense lol!
So why doesn't he say it, then? How do I know that
Ah, lest I forget:
Neophyte said:I think he meantin the
sense of the word, rather than
in the
sense lol!
Look at JtL's collection. The question isn't harder but more expensive..... [huh]Neophyte said:Learned in the past couple of days that I am a 7 3/8 Long Oval, like JTL. How much harder is this going to make finding vintage ebay hats for me?
gtdean48 said:Look at JtL's collection. The question isn't harder but more expensive..... [huh]
Neophyte said:Learned in the past couple of days that I am a 7 3/8 Long Oval, like JTL. How much harder is this going to make finding vintage ebay hats for me?
gtdean48 said:Look at JtL's collection. The question isn't harder but more expensive..... [huh]
BanjoMerlin said:Long ovals in every size are less common so you will generally be bidding against fewer, but more serious, competitors. A really great deal is rare.
But, you may be able to turn a regular oval into a long oval. If you put a 7 3/8 hat on your head and press in on the sides does it fit? If so, you need a hat stretcher (the ones that just stretch the sweatband area will usually work fine) and some distilled water. Wet the brim, put the stretcher in and crank it to the proper dimension and let dry. This will basically give you a bit more dip on the brim and give you the long oval shape.
The other option is to get a hat one size larger and pad the sides in a bit.
Remember, a Long Oval has the same circumference as the same size Regular Oval - it is just a different shape. Longer and narrower. So a regular oval one size up may be the same length as the smaller long oval.
Neophyte said:When wearing my Campdraft, the most oval hat I own, I still feel pressure on my forehead and there are gaps on the sides.
I have a 7 5/8 LO, & even have a 7 1/2 XLO that fits about the same. Hat stretchers are a constantly used tool for my noggin shape. Life gives you lemmons....Neophyte said:... When wearing my Campdraft, the most oval hat I own, I still feel pressure on my forehead and there are gaps on the sides...
BanjoMerlin said:That one is probably a candidate for stretching to a longer oval. Put it on your head and press the sides in (press on the ribbon) to touch your head. The pressure on the forehead should go away. The front and back of the brim will probably dip a bit more, this is the effect you get when you stretch a regular to long oval.
Neophyte said:I noticed the effect you mentioned about the alleviating pressure, but here's something more curious: All that pressure I was talking about, it only really shows up when I have the brim flipped up or in hollywood configuration. Flipping it back down to the traditional style seems to have alleviated the pressure.
zetwal said:Not at all curious. The way the brim is positioned can certainly change the fit. So too the way the crown is creased, that can really change things as well. I don't crease all my hats the same. I always take fit into account when deciding how I want to snap or crease any given hat.![]()