carldelo
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,568
- Location
- Astoria, NYC
Alternate method - measure the OUTSIDE circumference
It's easy to measure the outside circumference of a hat using a soft tape. From elementary geometry, it's easy to show that the inside circumference will be less by 2*Pi*t, where t is the thickness of the hat itself. The thickness includes the sweatband, the felt, the ribbon and the bow. This is great if you could measure the thickness, but that's not easy.
However, I just did a test with 8 of my hats, and the results seem pretty useful --- the term 2*Pi*t appears to be almost exactly 1". I wear a size 7-3/4, and my head is 24-3/8" in circumference. Measuring the outside circumference of 8 hats gives the following results:
FWIW, 5 of the hats are modern Stetsons, 2 are Akubra polystraws and 1 is a vintage Milan straw.
If one could measure the outside of a hat and just subtract 1" to find the internal circumference, that would be very useful. I'd be very interested to see the results from others who can do the same measurements with a range of hats. The results should depend on hat thickness, and I have a limited sample to work with. Perhaps for thicker felts, one could subtract a bit more, 1-1/8".
As Art points out, however, circumference itself won't guarantee a good fit. But it can rule out a hat that's clearly the wrong size.
It's easy to measure the outside circumference of a hat using a soft tape. From elementary geometry, it's easy to show that the inside circumference will be less by 2*Pi*t, where t is the thickness of the hat itself. The thickness includes the sweatband, the felt, the ribbon and the bow. This is great if you could measure the thickness, but that's not easy.
However, I just did a test with 8 of my hats, and the results seem pretty useful --- the term 2*Pi*t appears to be almost exactly 1". I wear a size 7-3/4, and my head is 24-3/8" in circumference. Measuring the outside circumference of 8 hats gives the following results:
- The three hats that fit the best all had outside circumference of 25-3/8". Subtracting 1" gives 24-3/8", my size.
- One hat that fits a bit tight had outside circumference 25-1/4". Subtracting 1" gives 1/8" less than my size.
- Two hats that fit slightly loose had outside circumference 25-1/2". Subtracting 1" gives 1/8" oversize.
- One hat has outside circumference 25-5/8", if fits slightly loose with 1/8" foam strips behind the band.
- My old straw that I bought one size too small has outside diameter 24-7/8", subtracting 1" and dividing by Pi gives a size slightly less than 7-5/8, as it has shrunk over the years.
FWIW, 5 of the hats are modern Stetsons, 2 are Akubra polystraws and 1 is a vintage Milan straw.
If one could measure the outside of a hat and just subtract 1" to find the internal circumference, that would be very useful. I'd be very interested to see the results from others who can do the same measurements with a range of hats. The results should depend on hat thickness, and I have a limited sample to work with. Perhaps for thicker felts, one could subtract a bit more, 1-1/8".
As Art points out, however, circumference itself won't guarantee a good fit. But it can rule out a hat that's clearly the wrong size.