Panamabob
Call Me a Cab
- Messages
- 2,012
- Location
- Fort Wayne, Indiana
I'll count them in two Mondays.
Panamabob said:I'll count them in two Mondays.
Panamabob said:The best weavers might spend 4-5 months on one hat, but it isn't the only hat they are weaving at the time.
feltfan said:So tell me, where do you find a ready supply of 1930s or 1940s
Montecristi Panamas with that aged look, a fine Supernatural
sweatband, and a classic period optimo block? Because if you
have a supply at a good price, I'd like to know about it.
As a consequence one can buy a very high quality straw hat usually much cheaper than most Panamas.
Panamabob said:Such as? Enlighten me, please.
Panamabob said:What I see is that the bigger companies take the lowest dollar hat and make bodies from that. Maybe some of the guys who sell Borsalino and Stetson will chime in. When you take a low dollar raw body and pass it off as perfection, along with a high price, something is wrong. I see those Cuenca Cocoa colored hats and I cringe at what they charge. Same with Borsalino and Stetson for intro quality Brisas.
What takes the cake is when I see hats from Borsalino or Lock & Co. and other "experts" that blatantly say Montecristi on them, yet they are Cuenca hats with the Brisa weave pattern. Now that is ridiculous! When I tell them they are full of beans, I get emails such as this from Lock:
Panamabob said:I guess I'm just not understanding what a "straw" is as compared to a "Panama."
Panamabob said:I guess I didn't consider lumping paper and rayon hats into the family of a Montecristi or a Cuenca. Panama Hats meaning a Montecristi or a Cuenca made of Paja Toquilla from Ecuador.