Tango Yankee
Call Me a Cab
- Messages
- 2,433
- Location
- Lucasville, OH
Last Saturday I finally got around to finishing working on my brother-in-law's hat, a Brent (Montgomery Ward) stingy brim that had belonged to his father. When he gave it to me to work on it was in pretty bad shape--filthy, rotting sweatband, badly soiled liner.
A while back I pulled out the liner and washed it, and gave the hat a naptha bath. That was when I found out for sure the sweatband was bad--it started coming apart. The project was put on hold for a while.
Saturday morning while looking at the calendar I realized that Dennis' birthday was on Monday, and decided that I needed to finish fixing the hat back up so we could give it to him before then. Getting it out, I started to work. Here's a couple of photos of the old sweatband:
I carefully removed the sweatband. While handling the hat I realized that the felt still felt "off" to me. I can't describe it, but I thought it still had some grease or whatever in it and decided to give it another quick dip in the naptha. Off came the ribbon, and into the bath it went.
A short time later I pulled it out, and decided to put it onto a block to dry. Here is where it got ugly. While tugging down on the felt it suddenly gave way, like notebook paper parting at the perforations! I was horrified and mortified, to say the least!
It had given way along where the old sweatband had been sewn in, so my feeling like it had come apart like perforated paper was spot-on. Unfortunately, it had continued in both directions into the brim for a ways.
What to do? I finally decided that the best thing would be to fix it up as best I could, and return it with my apologies and another hat that he could use as a dress hat, since this one wouldn't fit that function any more.
I worked on sewing the split felt together. I found the felt parted easily, so had to be a bit more robust in my stitches to make it work. Once I'd finished, I sewed in a new sweatband and replaced the ribbon. Again, I found that I couldn't run the needle just part-way into the felt and pull it through--the thread kept pulling out of the felt. I had to go all the way through when doing the ribbon and bow. I was up until 2AM working on it. The next morning I used a glue gun to reinstall the old liner. Hey, it was glued in originally!
Here is how it turned out:
Fortunately, the tear was at the rear of the hat so it's not all that noticable when the hat is being worn.
With great trepidition we went to Dennis' and Denise's (AKA "The Dennys") house, where I explained what happened and presented him with the hat. Easy-going guy that he is, his response was to observe that I'd taken a hat that couldn't be worn and returned with one that could be--and that he'd be wearing it when he went to go see his father in Iowa again. His father has been ill recently, and to be able to wear his father's hat was something special to him. He liked the black Stetson I gave him as well.
I've heard of straw hats tending to do this when removing a sewn-in sweatband, but hadn't heard of a felt hat doing it. I can't put my finger on it, but the feel of the felt was off--nothing I can really put into words. I know that a Brent wasn't likely to be the highest quality felt in the world, but I still wouldn't have expected it to part like it did. I guess this is why hatters that work on vintage hats do it at the customer's risk! I thought I was being careful, but I guess I need to be even more so in the future. Or put the hat on one of my adjustable hat stretchers instead of a block!
Oh, well... all's well that ends well, I guess!
Cheers,
Tom
A while back I pulled out the liner and washed it, and gave the hat a naptha bath. That was when I found out for sure the sweatband was bad--it started coming apart. The project was put on hold for a while.
Saturday morning while looking at the calendar I realized that Dennis' birthday was on Monday, and decided that I needed to finish fixing the hat back up so we could give it to him before then. Getting it out, I started to work. Here's a couple of photos of the old sweatband:
I carefully removed the sweatband. While handling the hat I realized that the felt still felt "off" to me. I can't describe it, but I thought it still had some grease or whatever in it and decided to give it another quick dip in the naptha. Off came the ribbon, and into the bath it went.
A short time later I pulled it out, and decided to put it onto a block to dry. Here is where it got ugly. While tugging down on the felt it suddenly gave way, like notebook paper parting at the perforations! I was horrified and mortified, to say the least!
It had given way along where the old sweatband had been sewn in, so my feeling like it had come apart like perforated paper was spot-on. Unfortunately, it had continued in both directions into the brim for a ways.
What to do? I finally decided that the best thing would be to fix it up as best I could, and return it with my apologies and another hat that he could use as a dress hat, since this one wouldn't fit that function any more.
I worked on sewing the split felt together. I found the felt parted easily, so had to be a bit more robust in my stitches to make it work. Once I'd finished, I sewed in a new sweatband and replaced the ribbon. Again, I found that I couldn't run the needle just part-way into the felt and pull it through--the thread kept pulling out of the felt. I had to go all the way through when doing the ribbon and bow. I was up until 2AM working on it. The next morning I used a glue gun to reinstall the old liner. Hey, it was glued in originally!
Here is how it turned out:
Fortunately, the tear was at the rear of the hat so it's not all that noticable when the hat is being worn.
With great trepidition we went to Dennis' and Denise's (AKA "The Dennys") house, where I explained what happened and presented him with the hat. Easy-going guy that he is, his response was to observe that I'd taken a hat that couldn't be worn and returned with one that could be--and that he'd be wearing it when he went to go see his father in Iowa again. His father has been ill recently, and to be able to wear his father's hat was something special to him. He liked the black Stetson I gave him as well.
I've heard of straw hats tending to do this when removing a sewn-in sweatband, but hadn't heard of a felt hat doing it. I can't put my finger on it, but the feel of the felt was off--nothing I can really put into words. I know that a Brent wasn't likely to be the highest quality felt in the world, but I still wouldn't have expected it to part like it did. I guess this is why hatters that work on vintage hats do it at the customer's risk! I thought I was being careful, but I guess I need to be even more so in the future. Or put the hat on one of my adjustable hat stretchers instead of a block!
Oh, well... all's well that ends well, I guess!
Cheers,
Tom