Want to buy or sell something? Check the classifieds
  • The Fedora Lounge is supported in part by commission earning affiliate links sitewide. Please support us by using them. You may learn more here.

Advice for newcomer on custom hatters

Dave Brown

New in Town
Messages
6
Location
henrietta new york
I am referring to the outside band when I speak of leather hat bands in the western section. I dislike them because the bleed into the hat(most leather bands, I find, are water soluble)
thanks for the question
db
 

Dave Brown

New in Town
Messages
6
Location
henrietta new york
I agree , but it's agreat showcas for something I love to do :) and I have never met a costume designer that didn't try to stay in, and create the period in which movie was about .
db
 

Neophyte

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,445
Location
Chattanooga, TN
I am referring to the outside band when I speak of leather hat bands in the western section. I dislike them because the bleed into the hat(most leather bands, I find, are water soluble)
thanks for the question
db

Thank you. I think I've read about the bleeding before, but it took your answer to remind me :).
 

jlee562

I'll Lock Up
Messages
5,104
Location
San Francisco, CA
But the picture above displays the Ox Blood Optimo hat, does it not?

What hat, shown on screen, is yours?

Baron's also submitted a hat for Indy IV, but their hat was not picked and is not on screen in the movie, as is well documented, that hat was made by Steve Delk and Marc Kitter.

That was the discrepancy many of us had with Baron's with their wording about what they actually did for Indy IV.

With all due respect Mr. Brown, I take it on your word that you made a hat for Mr. Depp, but unless you are claiming the hat in the picture above is yours (which, appears to my eyes to be the Optimo hat which was used in the scene that the picture appears to be from), I would say your website is misleading.

So Mr. Brown, I take it you plead the 5th?
 

slumd

New in Town
Messages
3
Location
St. Louis
Custom Hats

Hatless Newby--wish to start with gray and brown, classic 2 5/8, Dana Andrews type look. Where to turn, seems like so many good options--Gary White, Art Fawcett, John Penman, Black Sheep, Optimo. Yikes! Any advice?
 

barrowjh

One Too Many
Messages
1,398
Location
Maryville Tennessee
Browns and or grays are just about everyone's first choice. Ebay is full of greys and browns, and all the custom hatters can take care of your request. Problem is, you need to visit an honest-to-pete hat store so you can figure out which size, which style, etc. You don't know what to request, and without a pic of you, those hatters don't really know what to suggest to you. Quite a few of us are still looking for the 'perfect' hat, so how can we tell you what to do, when we haven't figured it out ourselves either. enjoy the journey; I'm still having fun.
 

animator

One of the Regulars
Messages
231
Location
Seattle
My first real fedora was by Art Fawcett and it was a great way to start. I really appreciated the quality and how perfectly the hat fit (he sends a conformer that measures the size and shape of your head).

I think all the people you mentioned would make you a hat you could treasure.
 

Lexybeast

A-List Customer
Messages
353
Location
Ireland
My first custom was a grey Art Fawcett. Still wear the heck out of it.

525314025_vAfFT-L.jpg
 

Iyor

One of the Regulars
Messages
200
Location
NYC
I've tried several hatters, but the only ones I've gone back to are Gary White, and John Walls (jwalls is his username). Both have been making hats for a very long time, Gary I think has been doing it for around 40 years. Another great thing with Gary, and John is that they offer hats made from vintage bodies, Gary even has some cavanagh edge bodies. I haven't tried optimo, but you can see their work in the optimo dedicated thread they're excellent.
 

scottyrocks

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,178
Location
Isle of Langerhan, NY
Hatless Newby--wish to start with gray and brown, classic 2 5/8, Dana Andrews type look. Where to turn, seems like so many good options--Gary White, Art Fawcett, John Penman, Black Sheep, Optimo. Yikes! Any advice?

If you are indeed both hatless and a newbie, I, too, strongly recommend visiting a hat store so you can see what various hats look like on and with your head and face. A Dana Andrews look
Dana%20Andrews-002.jpg
may look great on Dana Andrews, but you want to see what looks good on you before laying out the bucks for a custom.
 

Historyteach24

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,447
Location
Huntington, WV
I would be terrified for my first fedora to be a custom because you learn from mistakes. I have tried on multiple designs that I thought would look awesome but made me look funny. Case in point I always have loved the look of a porkpie but they look bad on my huge head. I would go to a hat store even if it is a cheap hat store and try on some wool hats if I had to just to see what styles looked good on me. I would say I bought/owned at least 12 different fedoras before I bought a custom and then I could make an informed decision and knew exactly what I wanted.
 

Rabbit

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,561
Location
Germany
Going the custom route for your first fedora need not necessarily be a bad idea.
You can provide the custom hatter of your choice with information about you, namely some good pictures (totals and portraits from different angles) and some basic measurements (body height, weight, chest and waist would be a comprehensive list, I guess) that give an idea of your built. That's what I did with my first custom hat from Art Fawcett.
A good hatter will know which hat dimensions should work with your features and built.
One important thing to consider is that every custom hatter has his own style (within limits, of course) - most notably, the ribbon bow details, the felt finishes, the stitchings, the materials used (ribbons, sweatbands, liners), and the felt colors offered differ from each other. That's a good thing; you can study these differences by going through the respective threads here and choose to your personal taste. What you should know is that the recommendations of different hatters (about the block to be used, the ribbon width and brim width) will differ from each other at least to some extent because of their personal styles.
What I'm trying to say is that it pays to do your homework first. Since personal preferences differ so widely, and people's builds do likewise, it is difficult to make general recommendations.
Another thing is that some custom hatters use a conformer, and others don't. Art ships a conformer to new customers and makes a band block according to the conformer settings when he gets it back. I'm not sure which of the other custom hatters offer this service.
Hope this is helpful.

For what it's worth, the custom hatter of my choice is Art. He is known mainly for his beaver felts made from Winchester hat bodies in both Winchester's standard colors and some other colors made for him. He also does Panamas and Milans.
His style leans toward full, straight crowns (or crowns with only a little taper). His ribbon work is very distinctive, both the regular bows and the more elaborate ones (like sharks gill bows or box bows) are very well made, the materials in general are great quality.
 
Last edited:

slumd

New in Town
Messages
3
Location
St. Louis
Maybe . . .

. . . I shoulc try out a Stetson Temple first, then? Local hat shop currently out of sizes I'm close to; think I'd be around a 7 3/8, but trying on their straws (they mostly have summer hats in currently), different models/brands seem to fit differently. The thought of custom came up regarding the conformer approach; which should get the hat size correct, then I'll always know the correct size--but you all are right that, if it ends up looking funny on me, it will be an expensive mistake!
 

slumd

New in Town
Messages
3
Location
St. Louis
Beautiful hats, Lexybeast and Dogman! What are the crown/brim width dimensions, if I may ask? Shadowhawk from Black Sheep is around what I think would look good in gray, Marlo from Penman in brown or gray, but it is difficult to tell without "trying it on." All of Art Fawcett's work is quite impressive, too!
 
Last edited:

Forum statistics

Threads
109,304
Messages
3,078,443
Members
54,244
Latest member
seeldoger47
Top