Marc Chevalier
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- Los Feliz, Los Angeles, California
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It seems that back in the 1920s and '30s, factory-fresh newsboy caps' visors (brims) came flat, and were worn either flat or curved. The extent of the curve depended on one's taste. Flat visors were more "formal", whereas curved ones appeared more rakish and broken in. For my face, at least, a curved visor works better. (See avatar at left.)
The best way to curve a visor --and set it to stay that way-- is with steam and your fingers. Heat up a tea kettle and put your cap's visor over the steam. When the visor is warm and moist, hand-shape it to curve slightly, holding the curve with your hands for a minute or two (until the visor cools and dries a bit and the curve sets in), and then put the cap on. Do you like the way it looks on you?
If the mirror tells you that the visor would look better flat, then steam it again and re-shape it flat. Alternatively, if you decide that the visor needs even more of a curve, just re-steam it and re-shape the curve into a greater arc. Hold the shape, let it cool and dry, and try it on again.
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It seems that back in the 1920s and '30s, factory-fresh newsboy caps' visors (brims) came flat, and were worn either flat or curved. The extent of the curve depended on one's taste. Flat visors were more "formal", whereas curved ones appeared more rakish and broken in. For my face, at least, a curved visor works better. (See avatar at left.)
The best way to curve a visor --and set it to stay that way-- is with steam and your fingers. Heat up a tea kettle and put your cap's visor over the steam. When the visor is warm and moist, hand-shape it to curve slightly, holding the curve with your hands for a minute or two (until the visor cools and dries a bit and the curve sets in), and then put the cap on. Do you like the way it looks on you?
If the mirror tells you that the visor would look better flat, then steam it again and re-shape it flat. Alternatively, if you decide that the visor needs even more of a curve, just re-steam it and re-shape the curve into a greater arc. Hold the shape, let it cool and dry, and try it on again.
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