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Everything I wrote is based on documented research. I am fairly certain it would hold up under careful scrutiny.
I think you misunderstand what you are looking at. The ultra thin sweatbands are actually a mark of high quality, not "cheapness." Those fine leathers did not age well past 50 years, granted, and often got brittle (but hats weren't meant to last 100 yrs after all). But to make leather that thin, supple and deeply embossed is the height of the leathermaker's art! That is why as years passed the leather got thicker and less adorned--it is because the quality fell! It did not rise.
But this would not be the case with high end German hats from 1950s. IMO the high end German hats (say Mayser) in general were better made than there US equivalents (say Stetson) from that time period.
Steve: I totally agree. As you other places have pointed out, the Germans and Austrians didn't file patents like US-manufactorers did. We know about as much about the old German and Austrian velours as we do about Stetson's VitaFelt. What was it - what did it contain - and how was it made? We don't know, and written documentation seems impossible to find
As far as I know, Brad once succeeded in getting Winchester to make a felted edge on old machinery. As I understood him, the result was pretty far from the old edges. The principles are very simple, but it seems like it can't be done by any living felters or hatters. Nobody knows the details anymore. I would like to see some documentation for "very easily". I guess that was an "editorial tightening"
I don't doubt, that a lot of yesterday's techniques and knowledge can be reinvented, but many of them cannot be taught - simply because the teachers are not alive anymore. The micro breweries is a little different story, as there still were lots of living master brewers who had learned the old craft - and the craft was partly kept alive by a lot of "basement-brewers" during the profession's decline. The brewing craft was very much alive in other countries, and a lot of the new micro-master-brewers went to places like The Czeck republic, where high quality beer from small breweries always had been common. We don't have equivalent isolated enclaves where felting and hatting crafts have been untouched for centuries.
I'm aware that both Optimo and Art have developed their felts in coorporation with Winchester and Fepsa over the last couple of years. But there are still a lot of earlier used materials, that are no longer available to felters and hatters. Partly due to environmental restrictions and partly because the goods are economically unprofitable to produce today. Try to read old patents and check how few of the chemicals that can be used today.
I too hope, but I'm not that optimistic
Yes certainly. High end stuff always had better trimmings. I should have prefaced that I was talking strictly of lower end goods.
Tony: Wouldn't that make any debate on any issue obsolete - and meaningless? The way to get wiser is to exchange opinions and experiences - and if a person do not believe what he says/writes to be true, why should he speak or write in a debate? I don't really get your point
RLK, who is probably the most experienced hat wrangler in our midst and absent from this conversation, has commented in prior threads of this type that he feels we are prone to romanticizing the quality of vintage hats. That said, I would set my time machine for 1900-1928 for my own personal fantasy shopping expedition.
If you really wish to know, you have asserted, for instance, that modern hat band ribbon uses synthetics in place of the good old naturally derived rayon used in the vintage stuff, and that's what makes it inferior to the old stuff. That may well be GENERALLY true, but not absolutely so. I came across a stash of some very nice, recently made, hat band ribbon that rivals much of the vintage stuff I have in fairly large quantities. I believe the rayon in this new stuff is made from bamboo, but I'm not certain of that.
We're (you, me and Manofkent) talking at crossed purposes. The early 1950s British and European hats frequently feature the cheapest garbage leather imaginable, which happens to be thin. No deep embossing, no suppleness; just crap. That's what was available in a war-ravaged continent for the lower-end hats. They really are terrible. I've seen an awful lot of these things, good ones and bad. I can honestly say that this German one, dated 1953, is the worst leather sweatband I've ever encountered ,on modern or vintage hats.
I am reminded of this when I recognize that tendency in others.
Most patents (also the ones concerning hatter processes) are not particularly detailed. If they were, it would be all to easy to develope an alternative technique. It's a way to protect your product even further. As Steve stated, German and Austrian hat companies instead chose to avoid the patent process altogether. The lacking details often make processes and techniques look so much simpler, than they actually are.