Now I've seen people here discuss taper. I put forth that you don't know what taper is.
![mrgreen :mrgreen:](./images/smilies/icon_mrgreen.gif)
you think you can best this? it started with a flat brim and nearly straight sides.
![Image](http://i60.photobucket.com/albums/h10/erikbrock/Indiana%20Jones/THISistaper.jpg)
Moderators: Indiana Jeff, Dalexs
This is a great example of the hat reverting to the basic cone the hat was, prior to pulling it over a block and forming a hat. This looks just like what I get in to make hats with, except, my bodies are not quite that coney(for lack of a better term). Must be a difference in the shape of the cone used to make the body between factories.Here's one. This is my first brown fedora. I bought it at Burlington Coat Factory back in 2003. I remember diving into the Frio river with it o
Fedora:Fedora wrote:This is a great example of the hat reverting to the basic cone the hat was, prior to pulling it over a block and forming a hat. This looks just like what I get in to make hats with, except, my bodies are not quite that coney(for lack of a better term). Must be a difference in the shape of the cone used to make the body between factories.Here's one. This is my first brown fedora. I bought it at Burlington Coat Factory back in 2003. I remember diving into the Frio river with it o
This also shows why a hat tapers, if you visualize this hat once looking like a hat! Once a hat gets soaked to the core,(hard to do for beaver, but much easier for rabbit) the felt totally forgets the shape you put into the cone and reverts. That is, until the felt finally dies, and I really think this takes alot of years.
Felt is the only textile like material that is alive. This is why it reacts the way it does and tapers. And being alive, it is unpredictable, whereas, dead fur isn't so much. More stable is what I am getting at.
Of course the key to any new hat not tapering is to use a block with the same amount of taper as the cone had! But not many of us could put up with that much taper.Fedora
Not to my knowledge. Of course, if it is just a little, you can knock it out to the open crown, and recrease it. This helps sometimes, because a hat can settle into a tapered look, from the way it is handled, or worn, when in fact the taper is not actually true taper. I have gotten in a couple of ABs for reblocks that were not tapered, they were just creased a certain way that made the hat taper, and then the felt settled in to this. I reblocked them anyways, since that is what the customer paid for, and it never hurts to freshen up a shape. FedoraIf you've a hat that starts getting a taper to it, is there anything you can do to help it other than reblocking?
If this happened while still at home, this is something mother's (Darth Indiana wrote:.....Sadly I lost this hat years ago, and have no idea where, it just seemed to disappear.
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There are a few people here from Salem. I see it in their location but have never run across them.BendingOak wrote:Where in Oregon. Always good to find another gearhead near by.
Wives are guilty of this too.RCSignals wrote:If this happened while still at home, this is something mother's (Darth Indiana wrote:.....Sadly I lost this hat years ago, and have no idea where, it just seemed to disappear.
..........[/img]) do but will never admit to.
True. It's not usually such an unsolved mystery when wives do it thoughHollowpond wrote:...
Wives are guilty of this too.![]()
Travis