It's impossible to draw conclusions. You know very well that felt is a fluid thing - constantly changing. How can you know what kind of felt Cury made 20 years ago? Especially comparing it to felt you've never actually seen? Cury makes all kinds of felt now. Most is likely custom order to manufacturer's specs.
Even with as much as I think I know about movie making and movie wardrobe, I am always surprised when I see a prop in the flesh since it NEVER looks the way it appears on screen. Your reproductions look right on to me, but they probably don't look like the real hat. None of us would probably LIKE the real hat if we had it. Same thing with the jacket. If I sent the REAL jacket to a customer, they'd send it back. It's too this - too that - doesn't drape right - the fact is I haven't seen the real thing. Film makes everything look better than it really is.
I thought I was clear, it was just MY OPINION, and did not even throw in the HUMBLE
I do agree felt can be flexible, or varied, but you generally see this in the felt industry when there is a change of hands, or owners. The Sovereign line of felt from Stetson is identical in feel and looks as it was 11 years ago. Generally, I would say the factories are consistent in the type of felt they make, UNLESS there is a change of owners. These older companies, like Cury and the Portugal company are basically family owned business's, and you don't see the change in these, as you would in others like Stetson, Resistol, Charley One Horse and others who have had just the name leased, or bought in order to make and sell hats under those monikers.
Let's not get carried away and overstate what we know about the Raider's hat felt.
Carried away?
Far from it my friend. I have seen basically 3 types of felt, if I use the vast number of vintage hats I have worked on, and after seeing what Akubra, Cury, Portugal, Hatco, Biltmore, Winchester, Tonak, Yugoslavian, and Serratelli, and then add to that the major vintage manufacturers of Stetson, Dobbs, Knox, Cavanagh, and a plethora of other, less, well known brands. Out of this lot of vintage and modern felt, there seems to be basically 3 different sorts of rabbit/blended felt. Once you work with this stuff and see it for a few years, anyone would notice the 3 major kinds, with their own particular characteristics. And that is what I am going by. Now, these characteristics can be spotted from film, if the characteristics are ones that are visible to the eye. That is all that I was saying.
Now, if others can't pick this up, that is understandable. But, if I were a betting man, I bet I could show you a Portugal body, a Cury body and you could see the difference between the two. And if you saw these enough, over time you could pick out the Portugal body from a pile of mixed brands. And if you saw these felts on film, you could still pick them out. That was all that I was saying. I would also bet, that if someone sent me a HJ made prior to the current felt they are using, I could spot that HJ felt, right off the bat. It has particular characteristics that stand out, when compared to the current crop of HJs.
The truth of the matter is, Hatco MAY be the only company, other than DP that ever used the Cury felt, outside of the country of origin. I don't know this to be true, but I have heard that the S.A. felters are only used in cases of dire emergency, due to the very slow nature of these south of the equator companies in getting the product to you in a timely manner.(they have a completely different concept of time, as I learned when I was an Anthro major in college) I went through this as I was gearing up to start my own line of hats. I was sourcing an Argentinian felt, and my several thousand dollar order sat on the shipping room floor of this company for almost 6 months!!! Finally, the chap who had personally traveled down there to set all of this up, had to go back, just to get them to ship out his and my orders!!
Now, the felt from this company, matched what I saw on the film, if you know what you are looking for, when you look. But, the logistics of getting orders in in a timely manner was impossible!! And while the felt from Argentina was very Raideresque in appearance, the dress bodies were too small!!! This prompted me to look elsewhere. Now, this Argentinian felt was almost identical to the Portugal rabbit bodies that I have seen. And, I found out later, that the two companies were linked in some manner. Not sure how, because the Portugal company is an ancient company that is a family run business.
I really do think that I can spot what sort felt was used. I think most folks can certainly tell the difference in felt between the Raiders fedora and TLC fedora, but I may be assuming too much here. I could not have done it 10 years ago, that is for sure and a fact. But, I have no problems these days.
I can see variations in my own felt, that comes from the same factory, made by the same workers, etc. But, from a macro level, you can't see the difference. Once you start looking at felt 12 to 16 hours a day, you start to notice stuff, over time. In cabinetmaking, we called it "having an eye". This phenonomen does exist, believe it or don't. There is variation in woods and to the neophyte, two different red oaks that came from different trees do not look the same. To me, I could call it red oak, white oak, alder, birch, etc, right off the bat. I am using that same "eye" here. And it is fine to question my "eye", but you can't question the 3 major varieties of rabbit felt. They exist. Fedora