Randall Renshaw
My Mail is Forwarded Here
- Messages
- 3,102
- Location
- Nahunta, Ga.
Thanks, Robert, for sharing your experiences, as I have always been one willing to share trade secrets with most anyone, both in the building trade or hattery. Not good for business, some would say, but I always figured there was plenty of work out there—even in my small, rural area.
I’ve always been happy to share any hat restoration processes that I’ve uncovered here on the FL. One thing I’ve yet to share is this: white talc and pencil lead are indispensable mediums for covering a multitude of vintage hat sins!
I somehow figured that out on my own about powders to cover dark stains in felt from medium browns to all lighter colors way before reading about it on the internet, or here. Pencil use for lighter than felt color stains or faded areas/spots is something that works absolute miracles as well and I have yet to read that anywhere.
I’ll be looking forward to hearing more about your dye and felt experiment yet to come.
I’ve always been happy to share any hat restoration processes that I’ve uncovered here on the FL. One thing I’ve yet to share is this: white talc and pencil lead are indispensable mediums for covering a multitude of vintage hat sins!
I somehow figured that out on my own about powders to cover dark stains in felt from medium browns to all lighter colors way before reading about it on the internet, or here. Pencil use for lighter than felt color stains or faded areas/spots is something that works absolute miracles as well and I have yet to read that anywhere.
I’ll be looking forward to hearing more about your dye and felt experiment yet to come.
I usually fully soak the felt in hot water before blocking then steam for 10+ minutes tented in a trash bag. I steam them until I have taken out the rudimentary brim break and it more resembles a cone. I find that works best in getting a really good stretch over the block. If I am working with the FEPSA 95gram beaver I can get away with just a really good water spritz as the felt is so light weight.
That is a good question. Not sure how many felting factories used to exist back in the hayday of hatting.
When I was at Winchester they had bales of fur fibre in white (bleached for dyeing pastels) and then natural for the other dyes.
I am about to spend a few days working with dyes/felts and will experiment with dyeing an already cut brim to see how exact I can get it.
Since I have yet to build or dye any custom hats from scratch using modern hat bodies, I wouldn’t know what I was in for, but with vintage hats, I’ve not had a problem with pulling the brims, bound or not, to exact measurements fully around. Is it difficult or different with new hat bodies?