Swing Motorman
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 256
- Location
- North-Central Penna.
Hello all,
I'm wondering if anyone else has made their own hat, particularly if you used materials not normally associated with hats.
Two months into my trolley museum volunteering, I decided I needed a cap. I could get one for around $100 (and a lot of waiting), or I could try to make my own. I had never attempted this, but being the fixit/tinkerer that I am, I resolved to try, and took a shopping excursion to my college bookstore.
I built my cap using just a few materials:
-a plastic folder
-a canvas athletic bag
-a baseball cap
-two museum fare tokens
-one museum pill case
-a gold paint pen
-artist's matte medium
-pushpins
-paperclips
Here's the result.
The inside, showing the plastic folder frame with stripped-down pushpin fasteners. The band and brim are reshaped and re-used from the baseball cap.
A closeup of the side buttons, incorporating experimental museum fare tokens from years ago. The tokens are soldered to paperclips, which are stuck through the hat band. The trolley is a Chicago, Aurora & Elgin commuter car. The hat fabric is the canvas bag cut into strips, fastened, and coated liberally with matte medium.
The hat badge is a wood-top pill case, painted gold and super-glued to a loop of rope. Both the rope behind the badge and the decorative rope across the brim are the drawstrings from the athletic bag, which also donated the canvas covering.
The badge shows a Brazilian open-air trolley. You can also see the hat in use in the vehicles thread linked to above.
Amazingly, this hat has held up for a year and a half with no need for repair and no major wear. It has served through rain:rain:, snow:smow:, and summer heat:flame:. I can even grab it by the brim and swing it to bat bees out of the trolleys. You can bet I check the inside VERY well before putting it back on my head!!
My favorite experience with this hat was swing dancing in it. I raced back to college from the museum to make it to a live band swing dance, and I had no time to change. So when the band struck up "Chattanooga Choo-Choo," there was an actual electric railway operator on the floor in uniform. Not easy to dance fast in a hat, but it was so worth it that time.
So, any other home-built hats out there? Please share!
I'm wondering if anyone else has made their own hat, particularly if you used materials not normally associated with hats.
Two months into my trolley museum volunteering, I decided I needed a cap. I could get one for around $100 (and a lot of waiting), or I could try to make my own. I had never attempted this, but being the fixit/tinkerer that I am, I resolved to try, and took a shopping excursion to my college bookstore.
I built my cap using just a few materials:
-a plastic folder
-a canvas athletic bag
-a baseball cap
-two museum fare tokens
-one museum pill case
-a gold paint pen
-artist's matte medium
-pushpins
-paperclips
Here's the result.
The inside, showing the plastic folder frame with stripped-down pushpin fasteners. The band and brim are reshaped and re-used from the baseball cap.
A closeup of the side buttons, incorporating experimental museum fare tokens from years ago. The tokens are soldered to paperclips, which are stuck through the hat band. The trolley is a Chicago, Aurora & Elgin commuter car. The hat fabric is the canvas bag cut into strips, fastened, and coated liberally with matte medium.
The hat badge is a wood-top pill case, painted gold and super-glued to a loop of rope. Both the rope behind the badge and the decorative rope across the brim are the drawstrings from the athletic bag, which also donated the canvas covering.
The badge shows a Brazilian open-air trolley. You can also see the hat in use in the vehicles thread linked to above.
Amazingly, this hat has held up for a year and a half with no need for repair and no major wear. It has served through rain:rain:, snow:smow:, and summer heat:flame:. I can even grab it by the brim and swing it to bat bees out of the trolleys. You can bet I check the inside VERY well before putting it back on my head!!
My favorite experience with this hat was swing dancing in it. I raced back to college from the museum to make it to a live band swing dance, and I had no time to change. So when the band struck up "Chattanooga Choo-Choo," there was an actual electric railway operator on the floor in uniform. Not easy to dance fast in a hat, but it was so worth it that time.
So, any other home-built hats out there? Please share!