jamespowers said:but remember wood blocks are organic.
Regards,
J
deanglen said:The side dent in that bottom hat illustration points out something I've noticed in genuine vintage hats. The modern hats look so caved in smoothly, and the vintage hats have that, I'm not sure how to describe it, uneven, or irregular transition around the edges of the bash, be it the top or sides, that make them look like crushed paper, not felt. Does this mean the felt was very soft, very thin, or both?
dean
J.T.Marcus said:Dean, You and I are in a business where we have learned that questions sometimes have multiple answers. That's also the case, here. You have hit on two of the answers. Another is, that's how guys wanted their hats to look. It was considered proof that you had gone to the trouble of shaping it yourself, instead of buying it perfectly shaped from the factory. The same reasoning said that when wearing a bow tie, it should be crooked instead of straight, so people would know (or at least think) you had tied it yourself. That covers three reasons; there could well be others!
MKL said:Jeff,
Where in Kansas are you located?
jeff said:Iola - I'm probably about 100 miles due south of you.
We're recent transplants - I was born, grew up, and worked for 20 years in the San Francisco Bay Area. We decided to try out the small-town life, bought some acreage, and are slowly acquiring a herd of random animals .
Our Home on the Range.
MKL said:Dean,
I think you are making sense. I know what you were saying and I would agree you don't see that kind of bash today. I was just commenting on how nice your hat looked in your avatar. It is really a nice looking hat - bash and all! lol
deanglen said:Another point I was trying to make is not just that the hats were asymmetrical, but the bashes seem to give a strange quality to the felt, again the best I can liken it to is a felt hat that looked dented like it was paper. Like this from JP's ad: