feltfan
My Mail is Forwarded Here
- Messages
- 3,190
- Location
- Oakland, CA, USA
As has been discussed here before, Stetson Imperials, especially from
the 1940s and 50s, are hard to come by. So when I saw one a year ago
in size 7 1/2 for chump change, I decided to take a chance, even though
it clearly had problems.
When it arrived it I was both pleased and saddened. On the one hand,
that is some incredibly soft, strong felt and the sweatband is that soft
roan one sees on rare occasion, and in good shape. On the other, the
felt and ribbon were thoroughly stained.
I could have coughed up three times the purchase price and had
it cleaned professionally. Instead I did what many of you have done,
and stuck it in the closet.
This weekend I decided to see what I could do. In my experience,
even a professional cleaning won't always come up with a pristine hat.
So why not give it a go? Plain water and brushing didn't do much.
So I decided to try soaking in Ivory Snow. I use it for wool and people
have mentioned it here. I'm not ready to keep extremely flammable,
toxic cleaning agents in my home. Here's what happened.
These "before" pictures are, if anything, kind.
After soaking for a couple of hours, it's better, but not good enough:
the 1940s and 50s, are hard to come by. So when I saw one a year ago
in size 7 1/2 for chump change, I decided to take a chance, even though
it clearly had problems.
When it arrived it I was both pleased and saddened. On the one hand,
that is some incredibly soft, strong felt and the sweatband is that soft
roan one sees on rare occasion, and in good shape. On the other, the
felt and ribbon were thoroughly stained.
I could have coughed up three times the purchase price and had
it cleaned professionally. Instead I did what many of you have done,
and stuck it in the closet.
This weekend I decided to see what I could do. In my experience,
even a professional cleaning won't always come up with a pristine hat.
So why not give it a go? Plain water and brushing didn't do much.
So I decided to try soaking in Ivory Snow. I use it for wool and people
have mentioned it here. I'm not ready to keep extremely flammable,
toxic cleaning agents in my home. Here's what happened.
These "before" pictures are, if anything, kind.
After soaking for a couple of hours, it's better, but not good enough:
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