MikeinRome
One Too Many
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The sweatband on this 3X is too fragile for me to examine behind it for tags, so I've used a photo of one tag that the seller had sent to me.
1940's Stetson 3X with embroidered Last Drop liner. 3 1/2 inch brim, 5 1/2 inch open crown. Note that the sweatband was stamped twice in the front: once with "XXX" in larger letters and again with "XXX Stetson" in smaller letters. So it's not a 6X hat, Ha, Ha!
1949 Stetson 3X, part of a batch made to commemorate the 100th anniversary of Laclede County, Missouri. 3 1/2 inch brim and 6 inch open crown. Brim edge binding is about 3/8 inch and only on the underside of brim edge.
I figured if anyone would appreciate this hat, it would be you, Bob.Very cool! Most "centennial" hats I see are cheap wool derbies or westerns.
Ashenhurst's in Lebanon: Second and third (white front) buildings on the right.
View attachment 590174
View attachment 590175
My wife's Dad was from Lebanon (graduating high school in 1955).
I'm not absolutely sure, but I don't think I've seen that type or variety of gold liner logo until after or about after WW2.My new daily driver (albeit only after a trim) is a BREKF early/mid 1940’s Arminto. The 3x felt is incredible, and almost as moldable as my 50s 7x’s.
You learn something new everyday I always thought that rectangle logo on the sweat showed up later. Awesome hat!It was the price, size tag, and roundel that confirmed 40s me. The nail in the coffin was the $17.50 dead match for an Arminto in the 1944-45 Stockman catalog that Vic posted
See my edited post back a bit, where I show that logo in the 1900 catalog.You learn something new everyday I always thought that rectangle logo on the sweat showed up later. Awesome hat!
You learn something new everyday I always thought that rectangle logo on the sweat showed up later. Awesome hat!