TheDane
Call Me a Cab
- Messages
- 2,670
- Location
- Copenhagen, Denmark
Yup. Reverse taper is "real," but the effect is accomplished at one point or another after the hat body is off the block.
Thanks, I appreciate the correction, Tony. I like the effect on other hat wearers, but I can't get tall crowns or center dents to work with my own face - so I never experimented a lot with it. Untill now I thought it was only done by creasing, but now that you tell me otherwise, I can imagine a couple of ways to stretch the upper part of the crown
So what happens to the brim when you remove the formillon / personalized band block after this tweak (this is for a Soft Felt)? Stretching (assuming it's permanent) is going to cause distortion to both the crown and the brim.
Yes I'm talking about soft felt. If you just put in the band block, the crown will retract to original shape, when the block is removed. The trick is to work the brim with a tolliker till the wobbling disappears. You have to make the brim brake very sharp, and the inner part completely flat. Then it will stay in place.
It's actually not about hatting as such, but about physics and basic, general construction rules. The brim is what keeps the shape of the hat's oval. Without it, the crown would be able to go anywhere at the fart of a fly. Think of a piece of mild steel band - say 1" x 1/16". Very wobbly in one direction! An L-profile 1" x 1" with a thickness of 1/16" is much stiffer - and in two directions (planes). Should you succeed in bending it, the one side of the "L" would wobble - and it would take some heating and hammering (or rolling) to get it straight again. Then the achieved curve would be permanent and very stiff again.
I don't think, that hatters of the 20's or 30's used a conformateur and a formillon for soft felts. They probably did the fitting on the customers head, when he picked up the hat. That's what Rocky helped me with, when I made my avatar at Mike Moores shop back in 2014.
He steamed the break a little and put it on my head, pressing the crown into shape. He then took it off, trying to hold the shape, while laying it on the finishing table. With a still warm brim brake he worked it flat with a tolliker, trying to keep the shape of my oval. It would indeed have helped him to have three hands, but he did wonders with the two of his! Three or four passes, and the hat had a perfect fit!
I guess, the ideal solution would be to "plate" and flange with a personalized aluminum plate and flange, but that is obviously impossible in real life
I also believe, that the vintage conformateur and formillion lack accuracy. It's never been a healthy practice to up- and down-scale - especially not mechanically. That's putting the kettle on for problems! On the other hand I'm sure, they pose great "Voodoo" to have around the shop