deenis
Familiar Face
- Messages
- 83
- Location
- Upstate Vermont, U.S.A.
A vendor on Ebay wrote this to me when I asked if his hat was 100% beaver fur:
"To my knowledge, there's no hat 100% Beaver, all hats are a fur blend. "X's" on a hat notes the percentage of Beaver in the hat. This hat says 100% genuine fur (it may have been made before the X rating system), and means other than the Beaver, there's no other fibers except fur of some kind. Most often, rabbit (known as Coney fur), mink, ermine, etc. was used in addition to the Beaver fur. The reason these furs are so expensive is that it's not what you see when you look at the animal or the pelt, it's the first or second undercoat which is hard to separate and much more expensive. Hence, the blends are more economical and easy to work with in the felting process. Because this hat is by Beaver Hat Co., you can be sure the percentage of Beaver is very high."
So from what the vendor is saying, if a hat has 5 x's on it, it means that the hat is 50% beaver fur. I thought that it was just a way for a hat producer to identify the general quality of the hat and not necessarily a reflection of only the felt.
"To my knowledge, there's no hat 100% Beaver, all hats are a fur blend. "X's" on a hat notes the percentage of Beaver in the hat. This hat says 100% genuine fur (it may have been made before the X rating system), and means other than the Beaver, there's no other fibers except fur of some kind. Most often, rabbit (known as Coney fur), mink, ermine, etc. was used in addition to the Beaver fur. The reason these furs are so expensive is that it's not what you see when you look at the animal or the pelt, it's the first or second undercoat which is hard to separate and much more expensive. Hence, the blends are more economical and easy to work with in the felting process. Because this hat is by Beaver Hat Co., you can be sure the percentage of Beaver is very high."
So from what the vendor is saying, if a hat has 5 x's on it, it means that the hat is 50% beaver fur. I thought that it was just a way for a hat producer to identify the general quality of the hat and not necessarily a reflection of only the felt.