CRH
Call Me a Cab
- Messages
- 2,275
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- West Branch, IA
Try a Google search for "hat block wood 7 1/4 no. 52"
It's slim picken's out there.
It's slim picken's out there.
Getting a pristine condition Stetson 100 for $100What is affordable?
Getting a pristine condition Stetson 100 for $100What is next to impossible?
Try a Google search for "hat block wood 7 1/4 no. 52"
It's slim picken's out there.
Getting a pristine condition Stetson 100 for $100 Getting a pristine condition Stetson 100 for $100
How?Expand your horizons. And kick in another c-note. I guarantee in twelve months you will not miss the hundred.
I'll check it out.Try an eBay search for >antique hat<. It brings up tools and other cool stuff.
I don't cut or otherwise manhandle brims. But that's just me.
unrefine your search. Most sellers do not know what they have or what it is called. Same with a search for >Stratoliner pin<. A search for >airplane pin< will turn up many more matches at lower prices. At least they did before I posted this.
Expand your horizons. And kick in another c-note. I guarantee in twelve months you will not miss the hundred.
I prefer to buy from sellers who know what they are doing. I don't have time to peruse the cheap seats, if you know what I mean.
I agree with TheDane. I love uninformed sellers. Crossing threads with TJ's conversion corral posts, I recently bought an antique rounding jack for $4.99 in a BIN from a seller who seemed to have known what it was, but not what it was worth. I understand your point about time spent - there's always a trade off, but I love finding those rare items at great prices...
Not really. Some of the best buys I've done, were from buyers who didn't know much about hats.
Indeed, felt is a very tough material. Like other hair, it can last almost indefinitely if it doesn't become moth fodder.
I am reminded of John Donne's line in The Relic about "a bracelet of bright hair about the bone."
http://www.usask.ca/english/prufrock/donne2.htm