Every inch the gentleman, as always, Fabio. Great look.Homburg day with the vintage Stetson St. Regis
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Every inch the gentleman, as always, Fabio. Great look.Homburg day with the vintage Stetson St. Regis
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Very nice, Alan. I came across some Cuenca straw caps on my recent trip to Ecuador. What material is used in the making of your most recent Australian acquisition?
Good looking.Hey all!
This Dobbs "Sunbrero" with a Western flair was made right around 1960, give or take a year. At 65g, the unknown straw type rivals my Parabuntal in weight, with an open weave perfect for this warm summer day.
Have a great day!
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That is a prize!VS Panama.
Cheers! David
Both of those bodies should finish up beautifully.I met some folks in Cuenca that sell hats to Stetson. I'm pretty sure I saw a hat body that had that exact design in it, but didn't take a picture. Here's two that were on the table right next to it, though.
Nice hat, BTW! Is that a new one or did I just miss your previous posts on this Derringer?
I have a very similar boater, made in Brazil.The cap is made by our member Keith Lo Bue. He describes the fabric as hand woven hemp straw:
"The hemp is grown by the Hmong tribeswomen, dried, and the hemp fiber stripped from the stem and pounded, boiled, spun and coated with wax before it can be strung on an old wooden loom and woven into the finished product. All year around the tribeswomen can be seen with hemp fibers wound around their hands, using what spare time they have to connect the separate fibers to make one use-able thread."
The boater is made from braided straw plaits that are attached together in some fashion... I assume sewn. Much like a milan but finer and stiffer.
Beautiful! I'm a sucker for pork pies =)Royal Stetson Fedora turned Porkpie...Been getting in my practice of learning to reshape crowns using very little resources except distilled water, steam, and my noggin!
Good job.Royal Stetson Fedora turned Porkpie...Been getting in my practice of learning to reshape crowns using very little resources except distilled water, steam, and my noggin!
nice workRoyal Stetson Fedora turned Porkpie...Been getting in my practice of learning to reshape crowns using very little resources except distilled water, steam, and my noggin!
Just wonderful.The cap is made by our member Keith Lo Bue. He describes the fabric as hand woven hemp straw:
"The hemp is grown by the Hmong tribeswomen, dried, and the hemp fiber stripped from the stem and pounded, boiled, spun and coated with wax before it can be strung on an old wooden loom and woven into the finished product. All year around the tribeswomen can be seen with hemp fibers wound around their hands, using what spare time they have to connect the separate fibers to make one use-able thread."
The boater is made from braided straw plaits that are attached together in some fashion... I assume sewn. Much like a milan but finer and stiffer.
Great job on that porkpie!Royal Stetson Fedora turned Porkpie...Been getting in my practice of learning to reshape crowns using very little resources except distilled water, steam, and my noggin!
Absolutely fantastic!! What a hat!!This tried and true 1900s Stetson no.1
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WOW!!! This hat is really something special. GorgeousThe cap is made by our member Keith Lo Bue. He describes the fabric as hand woven hemp straw:
"The hemp is grown by the Hmong tribeswomen, dried, and the hemp fiber stripped from the stem and pounded, boiled, spun and coated with wax before it can be strung on an old wooden loom and woven into the finished product. All year around the tribeswomen can be seen with hemp fibers wound around their hands, using what spare time they have to connect the separate fibers to make one use-able thread."
The boater is made from braided straw plaits that are attached together in some fashion... I assume sewn. Much like a milan but finer and stiffer.
I love the color of this hat! It really pops!! Sounds like a great deal from your Haberdashery!I don't wear this Dobbs poly enough. I like the blue. It goes with my new shirt from my Haberdasher's big sale last week. Dropped a C-note and got $471 worth (4 new shirts). I also got one to go with my rust colored pug on my NW Panama.
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