Spellflower
Practically Family
- Messages
- 511
- Location
- Brooklyn
I've heard of guys putting hats in the freezer, but I dont' worry too much about it. Your horror story proves the possibility, but I don't consider it a likelihood.
NonEntity said:I, too, am a hygiene fanatic, and here's what I've successfully done with suspect clothing:
Put the hat inside a plastic garbage can liner bag, get as much of the air out as you can without crushing the hat, seal it up tight, and leave it be for a week.
Living things are aerobic--they need air--and this should kill any nasty organisms making a home on the hat.
There are cleaning products on the market made just for hats, but I would shy away from them as they can stain felt and remain embedded in it, which creates a new set of problems.
You can have a professional clean and block a hat--definitely don't let a "corner cleaner" do it--but I don't know whether or not even pros would use anything that truly "sanitizes" it in terms of killing mites, ringworms, and the like.
I'm with you Rick. I've had great luck with this method.Rick Blaine said:WHITE GAS/COLMAN FUEL/DENATURED ALCOHOL ... nothing living could survive that for long and as an added plus, many vintage items will come out a shade or two lighter in color. Use care however 'cause the alcohol tends to break down the stiffner and render hats somewhat softer... my .02
Brinybay said:I did a search but couldn't find anything about this. I know from browsing the forum that at least a few of you buy or have bought used hats.
My question is, do you do anything to sanitize them before wearing them? Lest you think I'm being overly squeamish, I have to relate a story from my childhood that has stuck with me all these years.
c1959, I was in a thrift store with Mom. Browsing some of the stuff, I came across an old WWII Civil Defense helmet. How cool! So naturally I tried it on and strutted up to show Mom. No amount of whining and begging would convince her to buy it, so back it went.
To our horrors, we later discovered it was infested with ring-worm. The Health Dept retrieved and tested the helmet and confirmed it was the source.
To this day, I'm very leery of trying on used hats.
So I said all that to ask this, is there a proper way to sanitize a used hat? What methods or products are used, or do you take it to a pro? Are most corner cleaners able to clean/sanitize hats?
KY Gentleman said:Wow, my head itches....anyone else?
NonEntity said:Ringworm, the pest Brinybay contracted from the old helmet as a kid, is another matter I do not know how to prevent. But I do know that it is a relatively rare problem in the developed world.
Ringworm, also known as "Tinea", (...) is not caused by a worm but by parasitic fungi (Dermatophytosis). It can exist anywhere on the body. (...) (U)p to 20 percent of the population has one of these infections at any given moment.
tandmark said:Now, is that 20% of all humans in the world, or 20% of the population in the developed nations (Western Europe, Canada/USA, Australia/New Zealand, and Japan)? That's hard to say without excavating for better data. But I'm willing to believe that ringworm is not as rare as I'd have thought.
Cheers (for all of you who aren't scratching themselves right now, at any rate),
Mark
RockBottom said:I think the most common form is athlete's foot.