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Stetson vs. Resistol

bbshriver

One of the Regulars
Messages
180
Location
Lexington, NC
I'm curious in general, but specifically in modern hats... and I believe Resistol only makes western/cowboy hats these days so we can limit discussion to those if appropriate.

What I'm curious about is whether there is a difference or brand distinction between Stetson and Resistol now that they are both the same company, and made in the same factory. They seem to sell for comparable prices. Is it just a different nametag, or is one considered to be superior? Or are they different but equal (say Stetson is "nicer" but resistol is more durable?).

This was an ongoing debate between a friend of mine and myself. I'd never even heard of Resistol until fairly recently, and always knew of Stetson as "the" hat. My friend believed Stetson was nothing more than an expensive name, and thought of Resistol as the best. I was looking into it and that's when I found they were both the same company made in the same place.

I think he has a 6X Resistol and I have a 5X Stetson, his 6X feels nicer, but being a higher grade, and much higher cost (I paid about $60 for mine he paid over $100 for his) it should.
 

suitedcboy

One Too Many
Messages
1,348
Location
Fort Worth Texas or thereabouts
I have a couple of dozen western hats that are 20 years old and newer in a mix of Resistol, Stetson, and Bailey. All are 20X or better. When I have done apples to apples comparison there is little difference. The older Stetsons made in St Joseph MO may have had an advantage in felt finish (exception would be the resistol 20X "Black Gold", more on this...) and used a finer feeling leather for sweatband but the sweatband stitching was coarse and would irritate my forehead. In other words, the Stetson's felt better to handle but Resistol's were more comfortable to wear all day long, day in day out. Both Stetson and Resistol are not colorfast in black or dark brown if rained on.
All of the Stetson and Resistol hats I have looked at in the last two years were indistinguishable from each other exclusive of liners and trim. The Stetson's have the Resistol sweatband style now.
Resistol came out with a 20x about 25 years ago. This hat had a much better finish and fitted a felt band with a tooled buckle set and it was pounced to have the silkiest feel. This is their Black Gold hat. I have a few of these and they compare in quality, regardless of the beaver content, very well with 100% beaver hats.

If you go back to the 70's and earlier the game is quite different as with fedoras and other men's dress hats. The single digit "X" hats are tough, durable, and have a great feel to the felt. Newer hats in the single digits seem to all have some wool in their felt or at least some very coarse hairs of some origin. The newer hats do not stand up to being soaked (you know the usual stop at a watering hole, take off hat, fill with water and let horse drink out of it activity...).
 

bbshriver

One of the Regulars
Messages
180
Location
Lexington, NC
Thanks for your reply, sounds like in recent years they are the same hat, different brand. I'm sure the differentiation (and apples to oranges effect) gets greater the farther back you go.

I was just surprised to see that the 2 biggest western hatmakers were under the same roof (and have been for quite a while). Seems like there is quite a feud over nothing.

I have not noticed my dark brown Stetson having color fastness issues in precipitation, but mostly have worn it when it's snowing. Mostly rains here in the summer-ish so I wear my "vinylcote" Resistol straw hat.

I have 2 baileys, and neither match the Stetsons or Resistols that I've handled. One was my first "good" cowboy hat my grandpa got me when I was something less than 10 years old (he wanted to buy me a Stetson, but the salesperson convinced him the Bailey was a better value)

Now I have my grandpa's old Stetson, fits perfect. Not sure what vintage it is (want to look into it now) but know it's at least 20+ years old since he had it for as long as I can remember. My new brown Stetson, Resistol straw, and bailey straw (Bailey felt as well, but it's too small these days... waiting either for my nephew to get big enough or me to have a son someday, not sure which).

The X rankings are funny. Really only seem to have any value within a given brand... I have an 8X "Monte Carlo" that feels like it's made out of sandpaper, and a 5 X Stetson that's really nice.. And then there's the X's on straw hats which makes no sense at all...

Sounds like you have some nice hats!
 
Messages
10,524
Location
DnD Ranch, Cherokee County, GA
I have 3 western Resistols, 1 Stetson & quite a few vintage Stetson Open Roads. Nowadays, Resistol & Stetson are like what Pontiac & Chevrolet used to be with a Camaro & a Firebird, basically the same thing with few styling touches & badges different. From what I remember, Stetson went mainstream while Resistol was a small, regional player that the "locals" were very loyal to. Hatco swallowed up so many & consolidated to knock all the individuality out of them but keep the marque for those faithful to the name. The older Resistols seem to fit my LO head shape better, Stetsons were always too round. Also seemed the Resistol liners & sweatbands were better. I never have cared for Bailey westerns; they seemed to costumy or something.
 

suitedcboy

One Too Many
Messages
1,348
Location
Fort Worth Texas or thereabouts
Baileys are all over the place quality -wise. I have a natural and a black in 100x and they are indestructable, colorfast, and comfortable. If Im going to be riding and there is a chance of rain, I'll grab one of the Baileys. They look exactly as before after a THOROUGH soaking only cleaner. No brim droop and no crease relaxation. Better than the Stetson or Resistol equivalents. I agree that their newer lower X hats miss the mark somehow.
 
Messages
10,524
Location
DnD Ranch, Cherokee County, GA
My riding lid now is an Akubra I bought of a fellow Lounger, a Kiandra. My former one was an old Resistol that does look a lot worse for wear. It has been thru the ringer, in a few creeks & under a few hooves. It is Silver Belly so no color fast issues. I only have a black hat for show ring when my wife tells me what chaps, saddle blanket & shirt go with horse I'm showing. Black has always been too hot for me.
 

jwalls

Vendor
Messages
741
Location
Las Vegas
I've got a Resistol 20X in black that I wanted to reblock. When I removed the satin and sweatband, and soaked the hat it bled so bad I changed the water 3 times then gave up. I just blocked and dried it. I'll just have to remember not to wear it in the rain. By the way, the brim went from 4" to 3 1/2".:( :(
 

HATCO

Vendor
Messages
191
Location
TEXAS
There are differences between the hats. Different Blocks are used as well as profiles. Resistols are longer while Stetsons are rounder. Colors are different. A Silver Belly in Resistol is different from a Silver Belly in Stetson. There is sometimes material crossover (certain type of leather sweatband..etc) but all in all the designers keep their designs and their vendors/sources to themselves. If Stetson were working on a new felt or straw body, Resistol wouldn't get it and vice versa. The designers of the respective brands have a friendly rivalry...
Personally I think this is the best way otherwise if they were all the same it really does become slapping a brand on a hat, and that is not what we do.
 

HATCO

Vendor
Messages
191
Location
TEXAS
It sounds like it felted.

jwalls said:
I've got a Resistol 20X in black that I wanted to reblock. When I removed the satin and sweatband, and soaked the hat it bled so bad I changed the water 3 times then gave up. I just blocked and dried it. I'll just have to remember not to wear it in the rain. By the way, the brim went from 4" to 3 1/2".:( :(
 

CRH

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,272
Location
West Branch, IA
HATCO said:
...Different Blocks are used as well as profiles. ...


Industrial secret #1!

Who do I talk to to get a list of these curves 'as hyperbolic functions listed in order from pointiest to straightest'?
 

HatRak

Familiar Face
Messages
80
Location
Virginia's Shenandoah valley
duggap said:
I hate to ask a dump question, but what exactly is happening when this occurs.[huh]

Felting occurs when fur fibers bond to one through agitation. They do this because the individual hairs are covered in microscopic scales sort of like what you'd see in an artichoke or a pine cone. As the fur fibers are worked against each other, the scales interlock bonding the fibers together into a solid mat. As the fibers bond more tightly together, the mat shrinks and becomes more dense. In this case, what most likely happened was, the fibers in the hat weren't as tightly felted as they could have been when the hat was originally made and when the hat was soaked and agitated (a primary felt-making technique) to clean it, the material started the felting process again and tightened up. The hat is probably denser and tighter now, but it is also smaller.
 

HATCO

Vendor
Messages
191
Location
TEXAS
You're correct about the felting. In regards to the statement that it wasn't tightly felted please remember that during the wet block and the steam block the hat body is stretched out quite a bit pulling the interlocking furs apart. Soaking the hat made those fibers interlock closer together again.

HatRak said:
Felting occurs when fur fibers bond to one through agitation. They do this because the individual hairs are covered in microscopic scales sort of like what you'd see in an artichoke or a pine cone. As the fur fibers are worked against each other, the scales interlock bonding the fibers together into a solid mat. As the fibers bond more tightly together, the mat shrinks and becomes more dense. In this case, what most likely happened was, the fibers in the hat weren't as tightly felted as they could have been when the hat was originally made and when the hat was soaked and agitated (a primary felt-making technique) to clean it, the material started the felting process again and tightened up. The hat is probably denser and tighter now, but it is also smaller.
 

DapperDuck

Familiar Face
Messages
77
Location
Virginia
Videos

HatRak said:
Felting occurs when fur fibers bond to one through agitation. They do this because the individual hairs are covered in microscopic scales sort of like what you'd see in an artichoke or a pine cone. As the fur fibers are worked against each other, the scales interlock bonding the fibers together into a solid mat. As the fibers bond more tightly together, the mat shrinks and becomes more dense. In this case, what most likely happened was, the fibers in the hat weren't as tightly felted as they could have been when the hat was originally made and when the hat was soaked and agitated (a primary felt-making technique) to clean it, the material started the felting process again and tightened up. The hat is probably denser and tighter now, but it is also smaller.

Thanks for the great info everyone.

Here are a couple of videos from a TV program called "How it's Made." Even though they aren't very detailed, they show most the steps involved (including felting) in making a hat from fur to hat. And in this case, Stetsons.

Skip to 3:50 in the first video.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6mpqaKCOe7s

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SVKwKxhFlW4
 

bbshriver

One of the Regulars
Messages
180
Location
Lexington, NC
HATCO, thanks for your input on the differences between the brands.

One question as far as HATCO corporate, is either brand considered "more premium" or are they basically equal?

I have both, but my Resistol is straw, and my felts are Steston. My friend bought a 6X resistol which was nicer than my 5X stetson, but that's to be expected (he also paid 2x what I did).

Just curious.
 

Sanford Goldstein

Familiar Face
Messages
86
Location
3ft from the sun Arizona
Ok so from the only I do I’ve gleaned from a support rep for resistol... I am under the impression that hatco bought and owns resistol co along with the factory but only bought the Stetson name and makes them in the Resistol factory.

Now I’m now Mensa when it comes to business but if I buy the “name” don’t I also one the company? ... oops

Never mind I remember I think the Stetson hat co went bankrupt and stopped making hats in the mid 80’s (84?) I think twice so maybe there was nothing left to buy but the name of Stetson
 

Sanford Goldstein

Familiar Face
Messages
86
Location
3ft from the sun Arizona
BBSHRIVER:
Just an update on tge 20x distinction of quality etc

I have three black golds I bought in 1980, 1981, and 1991

I paid a decent price for each new between 75.00 and 90.00 to me thst was pricey back then

So, if you have a black gold and it has 20x in it , you can be sure it’s pre-1982

I have a diamond horshoe also 20x and my Stetsons are 3,6,10 and after 25-35 years I can definitely tell you my resistols have better feel, and wearability than my Stetsons. The Stetson I bought in the early 2000’s seem softer? More pliable, the cattleman crease crown doesn’t seem to maintain tge spread as well as the resistols whereas the crease seems more squished together then the resistols. However this isn’t a debate of which is better or not but about hatco

Stetson I understand from multiple hat forums and multiple cowboys I know and reviews online.. the Stetson is “the hat” from the days of the cowboy long ago, however even through the Stetson forum on another site the x distinction is lost. What’s a 100x Panama? Resistol uses the x’s for the quality of hat through it process not necessarily the % of beaver, whereas Stetson uses x’s whilynilly. I like a Stetson if made before the 70’s however I’ll buy resistol all day long.

Seriously I use gauge my hats by x’s, now I gauge them by how much Use I can get out of them and how much I can punish them and still have a great hat

My akubra I bought 20+ years ago and I’ve done everything to it you can imagine andnit inly has wear holes nice!
 

suitedcboy

One Too Many
Messages
1,348
Location
Fort Worth Texas or thereabouts
The name and the company has no consistency across many products. The Stetson name is valuable so it had market value. The stetson family lost the company in the late 60's and I don't think that Stetson was made in house past the mid 70's. The name got sold around and the hats were made in St Joseph MO for years into the early 2000's when the manufacture of them was moved into Resistol plant in Garland TX where Resistol has been for about 80 years through a few owners. Hatco Was the owner of the Stetson Brand and purchased Resistol from Pro Equine. The manufacture of Stetson was consolidated at thew resistol plant more than 10 years back If I remember correctly. The quality of both has waxed and waned but in the last few years I'm not seeing much distinction between the two. In the past Stetson were regular oval almost 100% and Resistol were long oval primarily. For many years cowboys and cattlemen I knew were Resistol wearers. The ranch owner would have worn Stetsons. For a long time Stetson had a bigger offering of higher beaver content hats and resistol's bread and butter were 3x, 4x, 7x hats. The 20X Black Gold a little more than 30 years ago put them on top. The self band and buckle set made that an iconic hat for years. The velvetty finish of that hat was unparalleled at that time.
 
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