I've been working on the shelf I use to store my hats and decided to try to make a floating row, similar as to how Graham displays his hats at Optimo.
The way I had it involved laying a long piece of cardboard on top of one hat and then sit another on top of this. This method was a bit impractical as the irregularities on the different creases made the hats on top unstable to the point that sometimes they fell when I tried to grab the one next to them.
I took some measurements, drilled some holes and used museum wire (the kind we use where I work to hang very expensive art. It's more like a cable coated with a plastic tube of sorts...) Anyway, I wanted to share this with you guys as I'm very happy with the results. Forgive the poorly lit pictures, I'm still waiting for my pro bulbs for my photo lamps to arrive... darn backorder!
The hats that sit in the bottom are on top of hat rests which I had to trim to make them fit underneath.
The way I had it involved laying a long piece of cardboard on top of one hat and then sit another on top of this. This method was a bit impractical as the irregularities on the different creases made the hats on top unstable to the point that sometimes they fell when I tried to grab the one next to them.
I took some measurements, drilled some holes and used museum wire (the kind we use where I work to hang very expensive art. It's more like a cable coated with a plastic tube of sorts...) Anyway, I wanted to share this with you guys as I'm very happy with the results. Forgive the poorly lit pictures, I'm still waiting for my pro bulbs for my photo lamps to arrive... darn backorder!
The hats that sit in the bottom are on top of hat rests which I had to trim to make them fit underneath.