My Western hatmaker makes a lot of cowboy hats. He makes fedoras too, and they look great, but they are stiffer than what I see at my hat maker here in Chicago.
When I first went to my Chicago hat maker, I noted that his hats were not nearly as soft as what I'm used to seeing in old movies. Those hats looked much more personal, and less like they were stamped out of a machine. But overall his hats are fairly soft.
My western hat maker can make a hat that looks the way I want it to look, but it will still be stiff even if the pinch isn't symmetrical and even if it has the look of a softer hat.
I could say "hey, don't put much shellac in my hat" but what would be the consequences of that? If less shellac means I just have to fiddle with it a bit to get it back into shape, then that's fine. But if less shellac means this hat maker won't be able to achieve the hat I want him to make, then that is a problem.
I guess my question comes down to this: Should I tell my Western hat maker to use very little shellac, or should I just let him make hats the way he's used to making hats?
When I first went to my Chicago hat maker, I noted that his hats were not nearly as soft as what I'm used to seeing in old movies. Those hats looked much more personal, and less like they were stamped out of a machine. But overall his hats are fairly soft.
My western hat maker can make a hat that looks the way I want it to look, but it will still be stiff even if the pinch isn't symmetrical and even if it has the look of a softer hat.
I could say "hey, don't put much shellac in my hat" but what would be the consequences of that? If less shellac means I just have to fiddle with it a bit to get it back into shape, then that's fine. But if less shellac means this hat maker won't be able to achieve the hat I want him to make, then that is a problem.
I guess my question comes down to this: Should I tell my Western hat maker to use very little shellac, or should I just let him make hats the way he's used to making hats?