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" The Great British Hat Makers "

PanosChris

Practically Family
Messages
979
Not sure if that belongs here or there is another relative thread. Please advise me accordingly if so. This was actually a bonus hat since it was packed on top of a vintage Stetson grey homburg hat posted in the Homburg Nation thread. Dark blue fedora (probably wool). Felt is soft and thick with some substantial weight on it. It is unlined (although there is some stiching behing the sweatband) and features ventilation holes. Brim has some minimal flange but it does not snap.
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Messages
18,588
Location
Nederland
Not sure if that belongs here or there is another relative thread. Please advise me accordingly if so. This was actually a bonus hat since it was packed on top of a vintage Stetson grey homburg hat posted in the Homburg Nation thread. Dark blue fedora (probably wool). Felt is soft and thick with some substantial weight on it. It is unlined (although there is some stiching behing the sweatband) and features ventilation holes. Brim has some minimal flange but it does not snap.
View attachment 178496 View attachment 178497 View attachment 178498 View attachment 178499 View attachment 178500 View attachment 178501
It's a nice find, Panos. Attaboy is indeed of English make and all of them are made of wool. Manufactured by Denton Hat Company Ltd.
I have one in black and @fabiovenhorst has one in homburg style.
 

PanosChris

Practically Family
Messages
979
It's a nice find, Panos. Attaboy is indeed of English make and all of them are made of wool. Manufactured by Denton Hat Company Ltd.
I have one in black and @fabiovenhorst has one in homburg style.

Thanks for the info Stefan ! The previous owner sold this as a "blue stetson bowler hat" (imagine it on top of the grey homburg I posted yesterday). It's always fun to get a bonus hat and it makes a nice winter one too :)
 

Steve1857

I'll Lock Up
Messages
8,927
Location
Denmark
Not sure if that belongs here or there is another relative thread. Please advise me accordingly if so. This was actually a bonus hat since it was packed on top of a vintage Stetson grey homburg hat posted in the Homburg Nation thread. Dark blue fedora (probably wool). Felt is soft and thick with some substantial weight on it. It is unlined (although there is some stiching behing the sweatband) and features ventilation holes. Brim has some minimal flange but it does not snap.
View attachment 178496 View attachment 178497 View attachment 178498 View attachment 178499 View attachment 178500 View attachment 178501
It definitely belongs here, Panos. Nice bonus find.

Denton are part of the Manchester group of hatters. Top notch hatters in their day with Battersby and Lee among the best.

The wool felt is the reason the brim doesn't snap like a felt hat.

This one is just as vintage as your wonderful Stetson Homburgs. The Trimmers' Union stamp mark is proof of that.

The remains of the inside stitches attest to a lost liner.

Again, nice bonus and a good addition to your collection. Congrats, Panos.


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PanosChris

Practically Family
Messages
979
It definitely belongs here, Panos. Nice bonus find.

Denton are part of the Manchester group of hatters. Top notch hatters in their day with Battersby and Lee among the best.

The wool felt is the reason the brim doesn't snap like a felt hat.

This one is just as vintage as your wonderful Stetson Homburgs. The Trimmers' Union stamp mark is proof of that.

The remains of the inside stitches attest to a lost liner.

Again, nice bonus and a good addition to your collection. Congrats, Panos.


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Thanks Steve for your comments and info! I think the same with you with the stitches and ex-liner, it's just the top label and ventilation holes that are kind of confusing. Maybe a later modification ?
 

Steve1857

I'll Lock Up
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8,927
Location
Denmark
Thanks Steve for your comments and info! I think the same with you with the stitches and ex-liner, it's just the top label and ventilation holes that are kind of confusing. Maybe a later modification ?
I believe them to be original. The tip logo would have been seen under the original liner's "onion" oil top. The vents are somewhat typical for wool felt hats, though not all.

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PanosChris

Practically Family
Messages
979
I believe them to be original. The tip logo would have been seen under the original liner's "onion" oil top. The vents are somewhat typical for wool felt hats, though not all.

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Good to know Steve, thanks! I wasn't aware the logo could be found below the liner. Removal of the liner by the original owner makes a lot of sense given the thickness of the felt, too warm I guess, even for Norway :) It could well just lost too.
 

Steve1857

I'll Lock Up
Messages
8,927
Location
Denmark
Good to know Steve, thanks! I wasn't aware the logo could be found below the liner. Removal of the liner by the original owner makes a lot of sense given the thickness of the felt, too warm I guess, even for Norway :) It could well just lost too.
It's not exactly below the liner, but can be seen under a protective oil / pre plastic substance which is part of the liner.

Often called onion due partly to its shape and yellowish colour.

The attached photos show one such on an English made Stetson.
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PanosChris

Practically Family
Messages
979
It's not exactly below the liner, but can be seen under a protective oil / pre plastic substance which is part of the liner.

Often called onion due partly to its shape and yellowish colour.

The attached photos show one such on an English made Stetson.
eba9850ec95d43b139957e96ff591a32.jpg
e589b08d78c291f7dd39a7603f3f766c.jpg


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Ah I see, thanks for educating me Steve!
 

Steve1857

I'll Lock Up
Messages
8,927
Location
Denmark
I can thoroughly recommend this book about the hat industry in and around Luton, south east England.

It mainly deals with the areas expertise in the production of straw hats, but covers the manufacture of other hats, too.

I picked it up while on holiday in the UK. Amazon may still have copies.
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Steve1857

I'll Lock Up
Messages
8,927
Location
Denmark
While brushing my hats today, I realized that I'd bought this lovely example of British hat maker craftsmanship about a year ago at the weekly Saturday flea market here in Elsinore, Denmark.

A Moores & Sons' Bowler created at their Denton factory, Manchester, made "expressly" for Magasin du Nord (the Harrods of Copenhagen and even more exclusive then than now) probably in the 1920s or 1930s. It's a very solid, heavy bowler with a hat liner that is a joy to behold.

I wondered what the term "Vacuum Fitting" meant, but soon found out once I put the bowler on. The wide and thick leather sweat band seems to expand thus fitting the hat tightly to the head. Not in an uncomfortable way though. This leads me to surmise that the original owner who ordered it needed this particular feature because he didn't want his bowler to easily fall off. Copenhagen and its environs are not particularly windy, so this suggests to me that it was used while out horse riding.

Whatever its history, and oh if only hats could talk, I am so pleased it became a part of my collection.
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Messages
18,588
Location
Nederland
While brushing my hats today, I realized that I'd bought this lovely example of British hat maker craftsmanship about a year ago at the weekly Saturday flea market here in Elsinore, Denmark.

A Moores & Sons' Bowler created at their Denton factory, Manchester, made "expressly" for Magasin du Nord (the Harrods of Copenhagen and even more exclusive then than now) probably in the 1920s or 1930s. It's a very solid, heavy bowler with a hat liner that is a joy to behold.

I wondered what the term "Vacuum Fitting" meant, but soon found out once I put the bowler on. The wide and thick leather sweat band seems to expand thus fitting the hat tightly to the head. Not in an uncomfortable way though. This leads me to surmise that the original owner who ordered it needed this particular feature because he didn't want his bowler to easily fall off. Copenhagen and its environs are not particularly windy, so this suggests to me that it was used while out horse riding.

Whatever its history, and oh if only hats could talk, I am so pleased it became a part of my collection.
7730e64f4e2d48120aeb067e86922544.jpg
09a5886d67a3843e8c4efa337b20a242.jpg
0e5d917b6b9c813f537052d13c637605.jpg
656fbd893becd168c93d46080f91ddf5.jpg
a61d67b690adc47672d4fb2e3ed54113.jpg


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Now why didn't I comment on this one before? Don't know, but it's a glorious bowler, Steve. Moores was a maker of very fine hats. Haven't been ablte to catch one of their bowlers before.
 
Messages
18,588
Location
Nederland
Patterson&Co trilby in a size 57. Overwelt brim at just over 4cm, so a real stingy. Felted ribbon in black. Crown a good 11cm at the center dent. The felt is almost identical to the Hückel melé I posted last week, which was a nice surprise. I've had a Patterson hat before and that one was very stiff indeed, while this one is very soft. Too big for me and not my preferred style. But a well made hat. Mid to late sixties I think.
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Steve1857

I'll Lock Up
Messages
8,927
Location
Denmark
Now why didn't I comment on this one before? Don't know, but it's a glorious bowler, Steve. Moores was a maker of very fine hats. Haven't been ablte to catch one of their bowlers before.
Thanks, Stefan. This is the only one I've managed to come across, so they are hard to find in the vintage market. If I were to go out on a limb, I'd say this is the best bowler in my collection.

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Messages
18,588
Location
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Last one of the four I bought of the same owner. These hats all belonged to prof. dr. C.S. Kruyt (I know because they came in a box with his name on it). Born 1920 and apparently still alive (hat wearing is good for you). This is him:
prof-cs-kruijt-jpg.183962


Fourth one is a Joshua Turner in black. Size 57 with an overwelt brim at 5cm and crown 10cm at the center dent. Unlined and unreeded construction. Very lightweight at only 77grams, which is uncommon for English made hats. Joshua Turner was a London based hatter who was listed in the register of English makers of 1902 as a woolfelt maker. In the register of 1945 they are no longer listed at all.
This hat has me a bit stumped. Some features point towards an early (pre-war that is) hat: the unreeded construction, the way the ribbon and bow are done and the shape, but that doesn't really fit with the wearer, who was born in 1920. Could be it wasn't made by Joshua Turner but just branded and the label seems to suggest that (looks like the labels used by Moores or T&W Lees). I'm going to go with late forties for that reason.
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Steve1857

I'll Lock Up
Messages
8,927
Location
Denmark
Another Bowler to the collection and another Manchester hat, too.

I believe this one to be inter-war years: closer to WWI than WWII in my opinion, so late teens or early to mid twenties.

I don't believe Hartley & Boedeker survived after WWII, so I'm very pleased with this one.

As hopefully can be seen from the photos, it has quite a high crown. Just over 5 inches (13,3cm). It's the tallest of my Bowlers.
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drmaxtejeda

I'll Lock Up
Messages
8,363
Location
Mexico City
While brushing my hats today, I realized that I'd bought this lovely example of British hat maker craftsmanship about a year ago at the weekly Saturday flea market here in Elsinore, Denmark.

A Moores & Sons' Bowler created at their Denton factory, Manchester, made "expressly" for Magasin du Nord (the Harrods of Copenhagen and even more exclusive then than now) probably in the 1920s or 1930s. It's a very solid, heavy bowler with a hat liner that is a joy to behold.

I wondered what the term "Vacuum Fitting" meant, but soon found out once I put the bowler on. The wide and thick leather sweat band seems to expand thus fitting the hat tightly to the head. Not in an uncomfortable way though. This leads me to surmise that the original owner who ordered it needed this particular feature because he didn't want his bowler to easily fall off. Copenhagen and its environs are not particularly windy, so this suggests to me that it was used while out horse riding.

Whatever its history, and oh if only hats could talk, I am so pleased it became a part of my collection.
7730e64f4e2d48120aeb067e86922544.jpg
09a5886d67a3843e8c4efa337b20a242.jpg
0e5d917b6b9c813f537052d13c637605.jpg
656fbd893becd168c93d46080f91ddf5.jpg
a61d67b690adc47672d4fb2e3ed54113.jpg


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Wonderful liner, Steve. Sometimes I envy European's antique hats availability. Then I remember the weather in Europe and feel at peace again.

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Messages
18,588
Location
Nederland
Another Bowler to the collection and another Manchester hat, too.

I believe this one to be inter-war years: closer to WWI than WWII in my opinion, so late teens or early to mid twenties.

I don't believe Hartley & Boedeker survived after WWII, so I'm very pleased with this one.

As hopefully can be seen from the photos, it has quite a high crown. Just over 5 inches (13,3cm). It's the tallest of my Bowlers.
02599ab3f9e4a300ded0d130e46962c7.jpg
e8862a0672a462a805e79dfb1029123f.jpg
f79f90da87a288755cd08c76289a3f3e.jpg
5269a0508e4d081647556a7bc67dcd93.jpg
0e33d2fcff0f2644f258553d6f88abee.jpg


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Nice find, Steve. It does have a substantial crown. It doesn't shy away from what it is. The brim is awesome!
 

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