ScottF
Call Me a Cab
- Messages
- 2,755
avedwards said:My way of finding out how high the quality a felt is, is rolling up the hat and seeing how easily the creases are removed afterwards. If I do this with my Stetson Chatham (in my avatar) the creases take a while to get out by hand, less if I use steam. When I try it with my slightly newer Susquehana Hat Co fedora (modern maker named after an Abbot and Costello sketch) I need little more than a few seconds reshaping in my hands. Both are rabbit felts, but I can only conclude that the Susquehana hat is better than the Stetson (which is still a very nice hat) although thickness may play a role in this too (the Stetson being considerably thicker).
I was going to also bring up the Chatham as an example of poorer quality modern felt. I'm sure that rlk is correct that there are some hats currently being created with felt equal in quality to what was produced in the past, but I also think that if you sat a 2009 hat shop next to a 1940 hat shop, and keeping inflation in mind, compared the hats at various price levels, you would implode the 2009 shop out of disgust.
Using the Chatham as an example - that's a $150 new hat today. Compare that to an equivalent Stetson (price-wise) of the past. I'll say no more.