Art Fawcett
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- Location
- Central Point, Or.
ME? I'm not crazy...and neither am I!!
lol lol lolArt Fawcett said:ME? I'm not crazy...and neither am I!!
Art Fawcett said:I believe that in daily used hats, tapering DID occur but the hats were worn, as meant to be, and thrown away in the normal process of living. The ones that survive today were not worn as much or taken better care of ( like the unappreciated Christmas tie) and thus were saved from the abuse.
BrotherBob said:This weekend, I made the purchese and am now the proud owner of a modest herd (100+/-) of Free Range Nutria...
feltfan said:Yeah, not like those sane, level headed hat makers of
today, who need to buy an entire cattle ranch in another
state in order to make custom fedoras.
Er, except that I already pointed out the falacy there:tonyb said:Oh, thank you, thank you, thank you for pointing out what should be obvious to anyone who brings a tad of common sense to his study of the matter.
feltfan said:I, and many here, have vintage hats that were worn a lot
for many years. I have a couple of Cavanaghs whose
Cavanagh Edge is so worn you can see the stitch divots.
I have plenty of other beat old classic hats. No taper.
feltfan said:Er, except that I already pointed out the falacy there:
I'd trade those beat up Cavanaghs for anything out of a
factory today. And almost anything from a hand made bench.
For the felt quality alone, even beat up from decades of wear.
Yeah, hats that were placed on a shelf should be in fine shape.
But hats that were worn for decades still didn't taper like
today's Stetson will in a single shower. The hats of the Golden
Era might have tapered some, but not like what we see today-
in most cases, their shape is still presentable. My most beat
Cavanagh, shown here in a fisheye lens (and a rather unflattering
likeness, I might add), still holds a better shape than anything
you can put under water with a new factory label: