Gobi
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 169
I meant to put this is 'hatmaking/learning the art of millinery' but I can't find it and Google app isn't working right now and by the time I scroll through 15 pages on here I won't have time to post.
There's got to be a better way to attach a sweatband. I know they used to make "cheaper" unreeded sweatbands, that actually seems like a good idea to me. I hate dealing with reeds, I hate the look of black plastic reed tape against a brown leather sweat. No one seems interested in matching the color of the leather. The reed doesn't like to flange out properly which defeats the whole purpose to begin with. Sewing from the back side of the sweat seems counterintuitive. You can't tell where the sweat is sitting, even if you tack it in the perfect spot, it somehow moves and sits too high. I hate the sound the reed makes if it shifts inside the reed tape. I've ripped out the reeds in nearly all of my hats. Now that I'm making my own hats I feel compelled to do the sweat properly for some reason. I've often done the "cheat" method which is sewing through the reed tape where the reed used to be. The challenge is angling the needle so it comes out through the crown and not up through the brim. It's impossible to get an even looking stitch that way and the worst part is you can see the stitches on the reed tape. Also many sweatbands have moved from the old fabric backed vinyl tape to a new "peva" plastic which doesn't conform as well, the tape ends up with small straight lines at angles rather than a smooth curve around the hat. Any ideas? Any tips? I just spent a couple hours trying to do the right way and ended up with the sweat sitting too far out of the hat. That nasty reed tape is hanging out of the hat. It didn't form the flanged bell shape as much as was needed.
There's got to be a better way to attach a sweatband. I know they used to make "cheaper" unreeded sweatbands, that actually seems like a good idea to me. I hate dealing with reeds, I hate the look of black plastic reed tape against a brown leather sweat. No one seems interested in matching the color of the leather. The reed doesn't like to flange out properly which defeats the whole purpose to begin with. Sewing from the back side of the sweat seems counterintuitive. You can't tell where the sweat is sitting, even if you tack it in the perfect spot, it somehow moves and sits too high. I hate the sound the reed makes if it shifts inside the reed tape. I've ripped out the reeds in nearly all of my hats. Now that I'm making my own hats I feel compelled to do the sweat properly for some reason. I've often done the "cheat" method which is sewing through the reed tape where the reed used to be. The challenge is angling the needle so it comes out through the crown and not up through the brim. It's impossible to get an even looking stitch that way and the worst part is you can see the stitches on the reed tape. Also many sweatbands have moved from the old fabric backed vinyl tape to a new "peva" plastic which doesn't conform as well, the tape ends up with small straight lines at angles rather than a smooth curve around the hat. Any ideas? Any tips? I just spent a couple hours trying to do the right way and ended up with the sweat sitting too far out of the hat. That nasty reed tape is hanging out of the hat. It didn't form the flanged bell shape as much as was needed.