I swung by a thrift store today, and, to my surprise, found a Harry Rolnick Resistol Beaver Twenty in the hat pile. The sweatband/felt labels show size 7, but it is a large 7 and almost fits my 7-1/8 noggin. It was dirty, had the green sweatband reed corrosion saturated through the felt, had a hole punched in the sweat from the sales tag, and had totally rotten sweatband reed threads; however, the felt, ribbon, and sweatband are in wonderful condition. On sale for $5, I couldn't pass it up. I've been looking for a beater, so I figured I'd do a home-grown "restoration" (using the term loosely). I'm no hatter, nor do I have such equipment, so any purists will have to forgive my workarounds and realize I'm doing this to wear and not to showcase.
Today, I disassembled the hat and soaked the felt and ribbon in a cool water bath with Dawn detergent. I worked on the corrosion stain with a toothbrush. I can't tell until the felt dries, but it looks like I got most of it to lift. Filthy water at the start but clear at the rinse.
While I was soaking the felt and ribbon, I removed the sweatband reed stitching, cleaned the corrosion, coated the exposed reed in clear lacquer, and sewed in new thread using the existing holes, expanding the rear joint a little to enlarge the opening. Wanting to ensure the felt doesn't shrink, I made a cardboard template from a well-fitting hat. I don't have a stretcher, and I can't make one from wood because my tools are packed away for an upcoming move. I inserted the cardboard template into the felt for a snug fit, and the felt is currently drying. I'll post an update once the felt dries and I can reassemble the hat.
Today, I disassembled the hat and soaked the felt and ribbon in a cool water bath with Dawn detergent. I worked on the corrosion stain with a toothbrush. I can't tell until the felt dries, but it looks like I got most of it to lift. Filthy water at the start but clear at the rinse.
While I was soaking the felt and ribbon, I removed the sweatband reed stitching, cleaned the corrosion, coated the exposed reed in clear lacquer, and sewed in new thread using the existing holes, expanding the rear joint a little to enlarge the opening. Wanting to ensure the felt doesn't shrink, I made a cardboard template from a well-fitting hat. I don't have a stretcher, and I can't make one from wood because my tools are packed away for an upcoming move. I inserted the cardboard template into the felt for a snug fit, and the felt is currently drying. I'll post an update once the felt dries and I can reassemble the hat.
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