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makitright

One of the Regulars
Messages
181
Location
Montreal - Upper New York State
Use a steam iron set on high - cotton setting - max steam - make sure you have a piece of cotton linen in between your iron and anything the iron touches - felt or any ribbon - a decent amount of spray with a spray bottle with distilled water - iron on your flat ironing board. Iron the brim on both sides until you get the shape you are after.

The most critical thing is to always have that cotton cloth in between the iron and your hat - touching the felt or ribbon will create marks on felt and possible distortion of ribbon or ribbon edge binding. Keep the iron moving and don't dwell on any spot for too long.

I like flat brims on several of my hats and use this procedure on a regular basis. I have ironed homburg brims to be perfectly flat with edge binding being perfect.
 

LuvMyMan

I’ll Lock Up.
Messages
4,558
Location
Michigan
A lot of Scotch may work....then use the iron and cloth between method...the Scotch is for you not the hat!
 

brandondefranco

New in Town
Messages
3
Thanks so much for your help guys and gals (scotched helped ;D) it came out great!

One last question when i took it to the dry cleaners they said it would return back to how it was if they flattened it, so it would be pointless for them to do it. is that true or does he have no clue on what he is talking about?

Heres a photo of the finished product... added a little of my own style to it.

LTyvxhP.jpg
 

TheDane

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,670
Location
Copenhagen, Denmark
One last question when i took it to the dry cleaners they said it would return back to how it was if they flattened it, so it would be pointless for them to do it. is that true or does he have no clue on what he is talking about?
I would say: On the contrary! The hats I have cleaned with a naphtha bath looked like they never did before. The crowns needed blocking and the brims needed flanging (in your case, flattening). Tumbling the hat around in a dry-cleaning machine would probably make the blocking/flanging/ironing even more needed.

This is just my non-hatter-two-cents, though. Just guessing, based on (rather few) personal experiences :)
 
Messages
18,188
I suspect the cleaners just didn't want to fool with just the brim if they weren't going to get any cleaning & renovation work with it. They probably felt it wasn't worth their time for what they could charge especially if you returned a second time if the brim curled back some.

You did a nice job on flattening the brim & it's always good to learn something about the felt & your hat.
 
Messages
19,414
Location
Funkytown, USA
Thanks so much for your help guys and gals (scotched helped ;D) it came out great!

One last question when i took it to the dry cleaners they said it would return back to how it was if they flattened it, so it would be pointless for them to do it. is that true or does he have no clue on what he is talking about?

Heres a photo of the finished product... added a little of my own style to it.

Looks great. And it should stay that way.
 

007

One of the Regulars
Messages
103
Location
Alberta, Canada
I've had good luck just wetting the brim with a spray bottle and setting it on a flat surface to dry but I wasn't trying to get it perfectly flat like yours. You did a good job on that hat.
 

Wesslyn

Practically Family
Messages
836
Location
Monmouth, Illinois
Hey folks.
I've got an old Dobbs hommy that needs a new sweatband. I've read in the past that Optimo is the way to go when it comes to that kind of work.
Has anyone had any recent experience having a sweatband replaced with them? Prices? Time frame? Shipping? Etc etc...
Much appreciated.
 
Messages
11,369
Location
Alabama
Wess, our own Bond here provides sweats, cut to length and pre-sewn for do it yourselfers or for a little bit more he'll replace it. He also does refurb work. He's worked on a couple of mine. He's in Iowa so shipping shouldn't be too bad. His prices are very reasonable but contact him for those. Turn around time on two of mine was around two weeks if memory serves. He does good work.
 
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