Blackjack
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,198
- Location
- Crystal Lake, Il
Everybody here seems to "bash" ( excuse the pun) the new Stetsons even though they have some really nice looking re-pops of their classics...what is so bad about these hats??
Everybody here seems to "bash" ( excuse the pun) the new Stetsons even though they have some really nice looking re-pops of their classics...what is so bad about these hats??
I (along with many others, I'm sure) are hoping that Stetson's new (but traditional-looking) styles foretell a return to the manufacturing quality Stetson and most other large hat manufacturers were known for back a half century and more ago.
It isn't just Hatco (Stetson, Dobbs, Resistol) that gets the bad rap, Blackjack. Modern mass-produced hats in general aren't what they were back when Grandpa was a young man. Just about every aspect of them -- the quality of the felt and leather and ribbon and linings, the attention to finish, etc., isn't what it was back before most of us drew out first breaths (and the remainder of us were still very much in our salad days).
We could go into detail on this, of course. But just hold a well-preserved vintage (1950s and earlier, say) Stetson with a typical modern one and the difference will be apparent.
I have more of an issue with the Stetson website than the new hats...when was the last time it was updated...2008?
Yeah but as a western/cowboy hat maker.If the average person knows of any hat brand name, it is Stetson.
Everybody here seems to "bash" ( excuse the pun) the new Stetsons even though they have some really nice looking re-pops of their classics...what is so bad about these hats??
I have more of an issue with the Stetson website than the new hats...when was the last time it was updated...2008?
Stetson to be such an iconic brand, especially in the hat department, has an identity crisis if you ask me...
op2:
I just finished applying some beeswax leather preservative to the sweat band of a Stetson "Monza" which I purchased earlier this year, it's rotation time. With a list price of $375, this is a Sage colored fedora made of 100% beaver fur felt. Following the act of rotating the hat with my left hand as I applied the preservative, I discovered that my wrist area which had been in nestled against the crown, was now a lovely shade of olive green.
I'm not sure whether the color transfer was from dye or from powder, but I will say that I didn't expect any colour transfer from what is apparently a high-end formal Stetson, particularly from a perfectly dry hat & which has never been exposed to rain. Out of fairness, the actual hat itself appears to be well put together with full-bodied felt, at least to my untrained eye. Still...I hope that the new Tawny Stetsonian that I put in for will be color-fast.