The Makeshift Block

In-depth discussion of the Fedora of Indiana Jones and all other hats appearing in the Indiana Jones movies

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Marcus Brody
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The Makeshift Block

Post by Marcus Brody »

How many of you have done the ghetto reblock?

I'm talking about making your own block, but doing it in possibly the most Macgyver-esque ways.

In fact, I've actually done this in the past without even really making anything. This method involved taking a hat that was already still in good shape and saran wrapping it completely. After that I would wet down the 2nd hat and squeeze it over the saran wrap hat-block and let it dry overnight.

I've done this twice, and its worked very well actually.

Another technique I'm trying right now involves a large cylindrical plastic container and a large amount of wet paper towels. Basically the container wasn't large enough, so I filled in the gaps with moistened paper towels.


Anyone else done any crazy things like this?
GCR
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Post by GCR »

I've done a poor-man's reblock a number of times on different hats over the years, though I would not consider my method "MacGyveresque" :wink:

I just found a tupperware style bucket, about 7 inches tall, straight-sided and big enough to fit on my head. I spray down an old hat with cold water, stretch it over the bucket and let it dry for the next few days. I don't mess around with removing ribbons or sweatbands since I have no skills with a needle and thread. I just reblock the whole hat as is, and bash it dry once it's done. Sometimes it works out with great results, and sometimes I ruin a hat. Unless you're messing around with an old beater you don't care about and are willing to throw away, I wouldn't try it.

That being said, here are some of my results:

This was my Indiana Miller back in 2003 after 3 years of HARD daily wear.
(The 1 3/4 inch ribbon is folded to look like 1 1/2 inch. I remember reading here that someone else tried this so I figured I'd give it a shot.)
Image

I reblocked the hat on my bucket-block and turned that hat into this:

Image

http://i128.photobucket.com/albums/p163 ... ler001.jpg

http://i128.photobucket.com/albums/p163 ... ler003.jpg

http://i128.photobucket.com/albums/p163 ... ler004.jpg

http://i128.photobucket.com/albums/p163 ... ler005.jpg

http://i128.photobucket.com/albums/p163 ... ler006.jpg

Image

The hat was a bit too small to begin with, so sadly, I had to part with it. I believe it now resides in the collection of Mr. Indiana Blooze. :tup:

I also used the tupperblock to reblock my old Akubra Fed Deluxe, which I then was able to rebash with the Raiders-accurate front pinch height of 4 1/2 inches (it had been bashed with the pinch much taller).

Image

http://i128.photobucket.com/albums/p163 ... JPD007.jpg

Reblocked Akubra is on the left in this pic, with my JPD on the right

http://i128.photobucket.com/albums/p163 ... JPD044.jpg

And I also used the tupperblock to turn my Raiders style JPD (see last pic above) into an Last Crusade style fedora, though this one didn't "take" in the long run. ](*,)

Image

I'm still planning on picking up a Lamode block at some point, so I can finally retire the tupperblock, but in the meantime, it seems to get the job done. :tup:

-GCR
Marcus Brody
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Post by Marcus Brody »

Ooh, great results you got there.

I've heard of your "block" just never saw the pictures. Needless to say, I'm impressed.
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Dr.Seuss
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Post by Dr.Seuss »

Marcus:

Do you "stuff" or pad out the inner/form hat? Otherwise, why does the inner hat not collapse back onto itself?

GCR:

One thousand and one "uses" for Tupperware. With stellar results!

(I went from no block to Lamode block. Of course, I changed mine, a trifle, to better fit my head.)

Sincerely,
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indy89
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Post by indy89 »

Holy smokes! :shock: That's the best #### makeshift re-block I've seen!
Marcus Brody
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Post by Marcus Brody »

Dr.Seuss wrote:Do you "stuff" or pad out the inner/form hat? Otherwise, why does the inner hat not collapse back onto itself?
The times I have done this, the inner hat was stiff enough to retain its own shape under the wet hat. In addition I also make sure the lower hat sits on something that would help it keep its shape, such as a tapered cardboard cylinder.

The other method I just tried actually worked pretty well, but it could have been better if I took a little more time to mold the top part carefully, because it's a bit too flattish and not curved at the top. It's probably the silliest and most non-permanent block ever. Try to imagine a plastic cylinder with paper towels molded onto the bottom of it in the shape of a block. I suppose this also means you could technically do a papier mache block, considering the relative ease at shaping it compared to say wood. Of course, you should probably saran wrap it too though.
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