Salmagundi Renovation
Hello All,
I found a hat in a Concord, MA., antique shop about a year ago. It was a Homburg and from the cut I guessed it was from the mid to late 30's (very straight and tall crown). The hat was filthy and about 1/4 size to small so I took a pass on it; to much work.
After my BCF hat, which I had re-done by Optimo, ended up under the wheels of a truck I needed another black fedora. I tried to buy a hat off Ebay, but what I got was gray batter's helmet with a synthetic grosgrain ribbon on it. To make matters worse, it was to large and when I tried to exchange it for the correct size I ended up in a two month long Paypal/Ebay battle with the seller who lied his butt off trying to keep my money AND the hat.
Anyway, by the time the nightmare ended that hat in Concord started to look pretty good.
I bought the hat and stripped it down to the felt. I wanted to see what condition it was in before I decided on my next move. I tried to hand wash the liner in Woolite and it fell apart like a bad cover-story.
The felt was VERY impressive. It was firm and a cleaning with masking tape revealed it was in perfect condition.
I considered sending it to Optimo, as they did a wonderful job on my old BCF and a Knox Homburg they turned into a snap brim for me (my bestest hat).
Thinking globally and acting locally, I took my hat down to Salmagundi in Jamaica Plain, MA.
For those who've never been there; fantastic. The staff is young (damn them!), the selection is good, and they do renovations.
I talked to the guy who owns the place (forgot your name, but reddish hair and beard), and told him exactly what I wanted.
The hat took a week longer than quoted (I did say I wanted it RIGHT, not RIGHT NOW, but my fingers were crossed when I said it). The owner recommended a telescoped bash to tame the hat's 5+ inches tall crown that made the hat look unbalanced even with a 2 3/4 inch brim.
The results are below.
Uploaded with ImageShack.us
Uploaded with ImageShack.us
Uploaded with ImageShack.us
Uploaded with ImageShack.us
Total cost was about $150 (hat + work), but for that I got a 1930's stetson cut the way I wanted it. The work was not EXACTLY the same as Optimo's, but the difference is negligable and supporting a local is worth more to me.
Let the Oh's and Ah's begin...
Hello All,
I found a hat in a Concord, MA., antique shop about a year ago. It was a Homburg and from the cut I guessed it was from the mid to late 30's (very straight and tall crown). The hat was filthy and about 1/4 size to small so I took a pass on it; to much work.
After my BCF hat, which I had re-done by Optimo, ended up under the wheels of a truck I needed another black fedora. I tried to buy a hat off Ebay, but what I got was gray batter's helmet with a synthetic grosgrain ribbon on it. To make matters worse, it was to large and when I tried to exchange it for the correct size I ended up in a two month long Paypal/Ebay battle with the seller who lied his butt off trying to keep my money AND the hat.
Anyway, by the time the nightmare ended that hat in Concord started to look pretty good.
I bought the hat and stripped it down to the felt. I wanted to see what condition it was in before I decided on my next move. I tried to hand wash the liner in Woolite and it fell apart like a bad cover-story.
The felt was VERY impressive. It was firm and a cleaning with masking tape revealed it was in perfect condition.
I considered sending it to Optimo, as they did a wonderful job on my old BCF and a Knox Homburg they turned into a snap brim for me (my bestest hat).
Thinking globally and acting locally, I took my hat down to Salmagundi in Jamaica Plain, MA.
For those who've never been there; fantastic. The staff is young (damn them!), the selection is good, and they do renovations.
I talked to the guy who owns the place (forgot your name, but reddish hair and beard), and told him exactly what I wanted.
The hat took a week longer than quoted (I did say I wanted it RIGHT, not RIGHT NOW, but my fingers were crossed when I said it). The owner recommended a telescoped bash to tame the hat's 5+ inches tall crown that made the hat look unbalanced even with a 2 3/4 inch brim.
The results are below.
Uploaded with ImageShack.us
Uploaded with ImageShack.us
Uploaded with ImageShack.us
Uploaded with ImageShack.us
Total cost was about $150 (hat + work), but for that I got a 1930's stetson cut the way I wanted it. The work was not EXACTLY the same as Optimo's, but the difference is negligable and supporting a local is worth more to me.
Let the Oh's and Ah's begin...
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