Bird Lives
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I'm actually 60 myself - but the 20/40 years was the number of years passed since experimenting with psychedelics![]()
Atleast, thats my story and I'm sticking to it.....
I'm actually 60 myself - but the 20/40 years was the number of years passed since experimenting with psychedelics![]()
Hello folks,
I have learned so much about hats and other things in the short time that I have been reading this forum. I finally went for an open crown hat, which I never would have considered before, an Akubra Campdraft Deluxe. After reading and watching the vids in the Monster Bash thread, I mustered the courage to put a bash in the Campdraft. I have been dry bashing it, but those were not holding very well past very gentle creases. I am a bit wary of steam for my first time doing a bash, concerned about applying heat to the hat, so I did the distilled water in a spray bottle method. So far it seems like it worked pretty well and was toatally easy to do. The hardest part is waiting for the hat to dry, and it’s still drying as I am writing this, but I’m very exciting and wanted to post some pics for those who may be contemplating doing his/her first bash. I may have used too much water as the crown got fairly wet, but it’s drying out slowly. I first went with a Cattleman crease and it looked great, but I settled on a simple center crease with moderate pinches to match the look of my black Barbisio hat (pictured alongside the drying Campdraft).
I am curious to see how stiff the felt becomes and fixed the bash is after it dries completely. I guess if I don’t like it I can do it again, and again, and again........is there a point when the felt fatigues from changing creases too many times?
Will follow up with pics of the dry hat and we’ll see how it turns out in the end.
Cheers!
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Probably, but I've re-creased a couple of my Akubras a few times and so far that has only made the felts a little softer. Fur felt isn't indestructible; if it was hat wearers wouldn't worry about creating holes on the crowns of their hats by handling them by the pinch. And several members here have fur felt hats that are decades old. The jury is still out on modern fur felts, but they're pretty durable stuff and most should survive at least two or three decades of the kind of "wear and tear" most of us give them....I am curious to see how stiff the felt becomes and fixed the bash is after it dries completely. I guess if I don’t like it I can do it again, and again, and again........is there a point when the felt fatigues from changing creases too many times?
The hat wants what the hat wants. All of my Akubras so far were purchased new (and open crown) and creased very easily the first time, but when I re-creased a couple of them they made it clear that they wanted to be shaped differently from what I had in mind. Once I figured that out they almost creased themselves into their new shapes, and I have to admit they were right....My experience has been that you really don't have to be too careful with them and, at least at first, change the bash as much as you like. After a while, though, the bash seems to settle in and it becomes more difficult to change it.
Yeah. Dig into the crown and have fun. If you don't like it, change it. If you don't like that, change it again. You won't damage your hat. You would have to crease it a few hundred times to have any effect on the felt.Hello there,
all tips and methods look good. However, I have a lot of fears about my first attempt to shape the hat (Federation IV Deluxe). I tried to persuade a salesman to shape a hat for me, but the ladies from The Hattery disagreed. They wrote that I would certainly manage even at home. Of course I have instructions, I have watched videos, but when I take my Fed to my hand, I start to be scared and it paralyzes my further actions. I'm afraid that I will do something wrong, make a bad shape or damage my hat. You can laugh, but it's a challenge for me. Your shapes are great. I would love to have it over me.
Maybe some first tip for a beginner?
Yeah. Dig into the crown and have fun. If you don't like it, change it. If you don't like that, change it again. You won't damage your hat. You would have to crease it a few hundred times to have any effect on the felt.
Sent directly from my mind to yours.
Hello there,
all tips and methods look good. However, I have a lot of fears about my first attempt to shape the hat (Federation IV Deluxe). I tried to persuade a salesman to shape a hat for me, but the ladies from The Hattery disagreed. They wrote that I would certainly manage even at home. Of course I have instructions, I have watched videos, but when I take my Fed to my hand, I start to be scared and it paralyzes my further actions. I'm afraid that I will do something wrong, make a bad shape or damage my hat. You can laugh, but it's a challenge for me. Your shapes are great. I would love to have it over me.
Maybe some first tip for a beginner?
The problem is that you write this as experienced users with easy access to new resources. Once I tried to slightly change the shape of my old Banjo Paterson (using steam from the kettle) and the right angle between the crown and the brim has changed into a gentle arch, like Snufkin hat. It made me so sad that I stopped wearing this hat.
Welcome to the lounge Geenee.Thank you for everything Guys. I promises that I will soon try to shape my Fed IV. I would like to take some photos for you and ask for a possible correction.